

North Star with Ellin Bessner
The CJN Podcasts
Newsmaker conversations from The Canadian Jewish News, hosted by Ellin Bessner, a veteran broadcaster, writer and journalist.
Episodes
Mentioned books

Sep 29, 2025 • 30min
Why this acclaimed Indigenous leader opposes Canada’s recognition of Palestinian statehood
Retired Ontario Justice Harry LaForme isn’t entirely comfortable with the label of “ally,” which many Jewish leaders have been using to describe him since Oct. 7. After all, LaForme—who was the first Indigenous Canadian to be appointed to the highest court in any province—says he always felt a kinship with the Jewish people, ever since his family told him his First Nations people were one of the lost tribes of Israel.
But over the last two years, the trailblazing lawyer and judge, 78, has become a frequently honoured guest in official Jewish spaces, earning thanks and praise for his outspoken condemnation of rising antisemitism here in Canada, and for his his support for Israel—which he calls the indigenous homeland of the Jewish people.
It’s a view that isn’t universal in Canada’s Indigenous community, and LaForme gets pushback for his stance. He’s aware of the perceived parallels between the First Nations’ centuries-long struggle to overcome the legacy of Canada’s colonial-settler past and the Palestinian battle for their own land and destiny. But LaForme says conflating the two issues is anathema to his religious beliefs about peaceful reconciliation. That’s why he’s come out in strong opposition to Canada’s recognition of the State of Palestine last week, the day before Rosh Hashanah.
On today’s episode of The CJN’s North Star podcast, host Ellin Bessner sits down with Justice LaForme to share his life journey, including a recent trip to Tel Aviv.
Related links
Read Justice Harry LaForme’s remarks in Tel Aviv at the Irwin Cotler Institute’s Democracy Forum in May 2025.
Learn what Justice LaForme told the Parliamentary Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights in May 2024 about antisemitism and Indigenous rights, together with Indigenous advocate Karen Restoule.
A new book by York University professor David Kauffman about the ties between Canada’s Jewish and First Nations peoples, in The CJN.
Credits
Host and writer: Ellin Bessner (@ebessner)
Production team: Zachary Kauffman (senior producer), Andrea Varsany (producer), Michael Fraiman (executive producer)
Music: Bret Higgins
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Sep 26, 2025 • 26min
Mensch of Steel? Comic books are on the curriculum at this synagogue’s Sunday school
When Sunday Hebrew school classes begin on Oct. 5 at Toronto’s Beth Radom Congregation, the students won’t be punished for reading comic books in class. On the contrary: spiritual leader Cantor Jeremy Burko is bringing his extensive collection of over 550 Jewish superhero comics into the curriculum.
It’s his (graphic) novel way to explore the messages of Jewish culture and resilience that he finds in the pop culture stories of beloved comic book characters with Jewish back stories or creators, like Superman, Batwoman, Sabra and Magneto.
The idea came to Burko as a response to the growing international movement to boycott Jewish and Israeli culture after Oct. 7. He hopes these larger-than-life heroes and heroines can help families find strength and pride amid rising domestic antisemitism.
He believes much can be learned from studying these historic Jewish characters and their creators, from Marvel’s The Golem to modern screen adaptations of The Thing in the new Fantastic Four movie, and Moon Knight, a Jewish hero who struggles with his identity. But, as Cantor Burko explains on today’s episode of The CJN’s North Star podcast, the heyday of Jewish representation in comic books may be behind us.
Related links
Learn more about Beth Radom’s Hebrew school and the now-concluded 2025 winter edition of Cantor Jeremy Burko’s Jewish Superheroes course.
Read more about when award-winning Canadian Jewish graphic artist Miriam Libicki was banned from exhibiting her work at a Vancouver Comic Fair as a result of anti-Israel boycotts, in The CJN.
How a Jewish Heroes Corps. comic series was born, in The CJN.
Credits
Host and writer: Ellin Bessner (@ebessner)
Production team: Zachary Kauffman (senior producer), Andrea Varsany (producer), Michael Fraiman (executive producer)
Music: Bret Higgins
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Subscribe to The CJN newsletter
Donate to The CJN (+ get a charitable tax receipt)
Subscribe to North Star (Not sure how? Click here)

Sep 22, 2025 • 27min
Ottawa’s new hate crime laws ‘a step in the right direction’, Jewish leaders say
On Sept. 19, Prime Minister Mark Carney’s government unveiled a series of planned changes to Canada’s criminal code. They, in part, crack down on the explosion of hate crimes across the country over the past two years since Oct. 7, mostly against Jewish people.
The new bill is called the “Combatting Hate Act” and still has a way to go before it is passed and takes effect. Ottawa intends to make it a crime when hateful protesters try to scare and intimidate minorities, including Jews, from accessing their community buildings, including synagogues, Jewish Community Centres, Jewish seniors homes, Hebrew schools and even cemeteries. The new law would also, for the first time, outlaw the public display of the Nazi swastika and the SS symbol in Canada, as well as other terrorism signs, if the people waving them are wilfully urging hatred against an identifiable group.
Many Jewish leaders are applauding the gesture as a strong signal that the Carney administration is keeping an election promise while putting a strong emphasis on fighting domestic antisemitism–that even while Canada announced on Sept. 21 it has formally recognized the Palestinian State, the government does not want to drag Middle Eastern politics onto Canadian soil.
So what’s in the new bill? Will it make it safer for Jews today, as the High Holidays begin? The short answer is: no.
On today’s episode of The CJN’s _North Star _podcast, hate crimes legal expert Mark Sandler—founding chair of the Alliance of Canadians Combatting Antisemitism—joins host Ellin Bessner to break down the proposed reforms. Also joining is Ezra Shanken, CEO of the Jewish Federation of Greater Vancouver, who personally met with the prime minister in Ottawa just days before the announcement.
Related links
Read more reaction to the proposed changes to the Criminal Code to outlaw terror symbols and the Swastika, and better define hate and intimidation outside Jewish buildings, in The CJN.
Learn more about why Canada banned the Irish band Kneecap from performing next month, in The CJN.
Why B’nai Brith Canada lobbied Whitby, Ont. to agree to ban the Swastika, on The CJN Daily (now “North Star”) podcast.
Credits
Host and writer: Ellin Bessner (@ebessner)
Production team: Zachary Kauffman (senior producer), Andrea Varsany (producer), Michael Fraiman (executive producer)
Music: Bret Higgins
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Donate to The CJN (+ get a charitable tax receipt)
Subscribe to North Star (Not sure how? Click here)

Sep 19, 2025 • 32min
Two scions of a prominent Winnipeg rabbinic family are now helming the city’s biggest shuls
For more than half a century, the Rose family—headed by Rabbi Neal Rose and his wife, Carol—have been prominent leaders in Winnipeg’s Jewish community. He has taught Judaic studies at university, they’ve led religious services and offered family programming, and mental health counselling. The Roses’ famous alternative High Holiday services launched in the basement of the Etz Chayim synagogue attracted hundreds of congregants over the years.
But after their four sons grew up and became rabbis far away from Winnipeg—and their daughter, who is married to a rabbi, also left—eventually the elder Roses left Canada, too. For a decade, they’ve been living in St. Louis, MO, where their oldest son, Rabbi Carnie Rose, held his last pulpit position.
But last week, the senior Roses pulled up stakes south of the border and moved back to Winnipeg, where they will now have to do some shuffling to decide where to attend High Holiday services: at Shaarey Zedek, where Rabbi Carnie Rose was hired three months ago? Or will they go to Etz Chayim, where their middle son, Rabbi Kliel Rose, has been the spiritual leader since he came home in 2018?
On today’s episode of The CJN’s North Star podcast, we’re joined from Winnipeg by Rabbi Carnie Rose; his brother, Rabbi Kliel Rose; and by their father, Rabbi Neal Rose, to hear how family ties are playing out across the city this High Holiday season.
Related links
Learn more about Rabbi Kliel Rose returning to Winnipeg in 2018 in The CJN and about his brother Rabbi Carnie Rose returning July 1 this summer.
Rabbi Neal and Carol Rose’s departure from Winnipeg in 2017 after 45 years left a void, in The CJN.
Why Winnipeg’s largest remaining North End synagogue, Etz Chayim moved to the city's south in 2023, in The CJN.
Credits
Host and writer: Ellin Bessner (@ebessner)
Production team: Zachary Kauffman (senior producer), Andrea Varsany (producer), Michael Fraiman (executive producer)
Music: Bret Higgins
Support our show
Subscribe to The CJN newsletter
Donate to The CJN (+ get a charitable tax receipt)
Subscribe to North Star (Not sure how? Click here)

Sep 17, 2025 • 26min
Sault Ste. Marie’s next generation vows to carry on Jewish life, especially for these coming High Holidays
In the riverside border city of Sault Ste. Marie, Ont., Jewish community leaders are stepping up to run programming for the 35 member families of Congregation Beth Jacob. The synagogue—gearing up to celebrate its 80th anniversary next year—can no longer afford to hire clergy to conduct High Holiday services. Instead, over the next month, the prayers will be all DIY, led by local congregant Tova Arbus, who’s filling the shoes of her father, Jeff Arbus, a former union activist.
But while the younger Arbus prepares to take the reins, she recognizes that even her father only led the High Holidays prayers once, last year. For decades, he led everything else, including Shabbat services. This year, Jeff is facing sudden medical issues. Another of the shul’s former presidents, 80-year-old U.S. Army veteran Gil Cymbalist, died on Sept. 8, after battling ALS.
With the older generation passing the baton, Arbus is determined to help revitalize Jewish life in her hometown. She’s helping to prep pre-teens for their bar mitzvahs; she’s holding family Jewish education classes; she’s even working with the City of Sault Ste. Marie, Ont. to mount a new exhibit on Jewish life, in honour of Beth Jacob’s upcoming 80th anniversary in 2026.
Tova Arbus joins host Ellin Bessner on today’s episode of The CJN’s North Star podcast to discuss her efforts to sustain the Jewish community’s future ahead of a hectic High Holiday season.
Related links
Learn more about Beth Jacob Synagogue in Sault Ste. Marie, Ont, and how to lend artifacts for the exhibit.
Read more about Sault Ste. Marie’s famous novelist, author and lawyer Morley Torgov, profiled in The CJN archives.
Watch the 1973 National Film Board documentary on small Jewish communities in Northern Ontario and how they survive.
Credits
Host and writer: Ellin Bessner (@ebessner)
Production team: Zachary Kauffman (senior producer), Andrea Varsany (producer), Michael Fraiman (executive producer)
Music: Bret Higgins
Support our show
Subscribe to The CJN newsletter
Donate to The CJN (+ get a charitable tax receipt)
Subscribe to North Star (Not sure how? Click here)

Sep 15, 2025 • 26min
Slain law professor Dan Markel's Canadian family hopes for more time with his kids, after new guilty verdict
A Florida court convicted Dan Markel’s former mother-in-law of first degree murder on Sept. 4 for the 2014 contract hit on the Canadian law professor. Markel, 41, was fatally shot in the head outside his Florida home by Latin gang members who his ex-wife’s family had hired to execute him, while the couple was locked in a bitter custody battle over where their two sons should live.
With Donna Adelson’s guilty verdict, the American courts have now put five people associated with the murder behind bars, most of them locked away for life: Adelson, 75, the matriarch; Charles Adelson, her son, a dentist, convicted in 2023; also Adelson’s former girlfriend, and the two killers.
Markel’s ex-wife Wendi has never been charged, and denies any involvement in the plot. Her parents were arrested two years ago at the Miami airport attempting to flee the United States to Vietnam, which has no extradition treaty.
After their former in-law’s three week trial ended, Markel’s parents delivered victim impact statements, including wishing her a Jewish blessing that she should live to 120, alone in her jail cell.
Ruth Markel joins host Ellin Bessner on today’s episode of The CJN’s North Star podcast to recount the family’s latest trial ordeal, and why she hopes her two teenaged grandsons will come to Canada.
Related links
Watch the Sept. 4 verdict and the victim impact statements given by Dan Markel’s family to the Florida court.
Read Ruth Markel’s book which she penned about her grief and her family’s journey as murder survivors following the killing of her son Dan in 2014,
Hear Ellin’s first interview in 2022 with Ruth Markel on The CJN Daily
Credits
Host and writer: Ellin Bessner (@ebessner)
Production team: Zachary Kauffman (senior producer), Andrea Varsany (producer), Michael Fraiman (executive producer)
Music: Bret Higgins
Support our show
Subscribe to The CJN newsletter
Donate to The CJN (+ get a charitable tax receipt)
Subscribe to North Star (Not sure how? Click here)

Sep 12, 2025 • 29min
What it was like at the world premiere of ‘The Road Between Us’
The Road Between Us: The Ultimate Rescue, a new documentary, debuted to a sold-out audience of nearly 2,000 ticket-holders at the Toronto International Film Festival on Sept. 10. The 95-minute film depicts the true story of how a retired Israeli army general raced south through the country to save his children and grandchildren from Hamas terrorists in the closest kibbutz to the Gaza border.
TIFF initially barred the Canadian-produced film from screening at the prestigious film festival, citing copyright issues over the use of some graphic video taken by the attackers on Oct. 7. There were also safety concerns about disruptions to the festival by large crowds of anti-Israel protestors. TIFF reversed its decision in mid-August, following international public outrage, including lobbying by Canadian Jewish leaders and festival donors.
The Wednesday afternoon screening attracted just a few dozen anti-Israel demonstrators outside. Meanwhile, a question and answer session inside drew “boos” from the largely Jewish audience as journalist Lisa LaFlamme asked the film’s protagonists whether Israel’s continuing military campaign is, as the Tibon family have suggested, “revenge” for the Israeli army’s humiliation on Oct. 7. But the filmmaker, Barry Avrich, insists his documentary is not meant to be political—he interprets it as a human story of family and courage.
Cineplex Odeon theatres will show the film in select cities in Canada and the U.S. starting on Oct. 3.
On today’s episode of the North Star podcast, The CJN’s news editor, Lila Sarick, shares what it was like attending the hotly anticipated premiere, and what the film itself was like.
Related links
Watch the trailer for the Oct. 7 film “The Road Between Us: The Ultimate Rescue”.
Read about how the Jewish community responded, including donors from the Reitman family, when TIFF originally announced the Oct. 7 film could not play, in The CJN.
Learn more about why, after receiving 60,000 emails of protest, TIFF officials agreed to screen the film, in The CJN
Credits
Host and writer: Ellin Bessner (@ebessner)
Production team: Zachary Kauffman (senior producer), Andrea Varsany (producer), Michael Fraiman (executive producer)
Music: Bret Higgins
Support our show
Subscribe to The CJN newsletter
Donate to The CJN (+ get a charitable tax receipt)
Subscribe to North Star (Not sure how? Click here)

Sep 10, 2025 • 26min
University is back in session. What are Jewish students walking into?
As a new academic year starts on Canadian post-secondary campuses, headlines and social media posts are already revealing a familiarly troubling atmsphere for Jewish students. At Concordia University in Montreal, the official student handbook seems to glorify anti-Israel protests. At Toronto Metropolitan University, masked students accosted the provost at an orientation session, calling her a coward and demanding she denounce the genocide in Gaza.
On Sept. 3, a study from the Aristotle Foundation, a Calgary-based conservative think tank, has found Jewish university students “four times more likely than the average student to be ‘very reluctant’ to speak up and share their views on religion during class discussions,” for fear of being penalized by their professor or experiencing hostility from other students. According to the study, 15 percent of the Jewish students surveyed reported daily abuse on campus for being Jewish, while 84 percent reported being the target of antisemitism on campus at least once a year.
Is there any cause for Jewish students to be optimistic? Are there examples of Jewish students or faculty pushing back against the overwhelming anti-Israel atmosphere on Canadian campuses? On today’s episode of The CJN’s North Star podcast, we’ve found a bit of good news—and some bad news, too.
Host Ellin Bessner is joined by Daphne Wornovitzky, a recent graduate from the University of Calgary’s social work faculty; Melanie Trossman, a social worker in Calgary; and also Gdalit Neuman, a PhD candidate at York University’s dance faculty.
Related links
Read Gdalit Neuman’s recent article about antisemitism and anti-Israel activism taking place on York University campus, and also as part of international academic associations.
Learn more about the pervasive antisemitism found in Canadian university and college social work programs, and also read the scholarly research by social worker Annette Poizner, published in 2023.
What happened when pro-Israel speaker Eylon Levy was trapped in a University of Calgary classroom last fall, in The CJN.
Credits
Host and writer: Ellin Bessner (@ebessner)
Production team: Zachary Kauffman (senior producer), Andrea Varsany (producer), Michael Fraiman (executive producer)
Music: Bret Higgins
Support our show
Subscribe to The CJN newsletter
Donate to The CJN (+ get a charitable tax receipt)
Subscribe to North Star (Not sure how? Click here)

Sep 8, 2025 • 28min
As the UN General Assembly meets this week, they’ll have a vocal new critic: Linda Frum
The United Nations General Assembly gets to work this week, beginning its 80th anniversary session on Sept. 9. And as the ambassadors gather in New York, there will be a new pair of Canadian eyes keeping tabs on how the world’s parliament lives up to its mandate of equitably improving human rights, especially on the Israel-Palestine file.
Former senator Linda Frum has been appointed the new chair of UN Watch, a Geneva-based non-governmental organization that has, for decades, exposed an alleged anti-Israel bias on the global stage. In the last few years, UN Watch has directed its lens in particular toward the United Nations Relief and Works Agency, UNRWA, which employed at least nine staffers who were possibly involved with the Oct. 7 Hamas attack on Israel—and who were subsequently fired in the summer of 2024.
Frum steps onto the stage at what could be a pivotal moment in Middle Eastern history. The UN will bring world leaders together in a few weeks for a summit wherein many countries, including Canada, have signalled they will formally recognize Palestinian statehood. It’s a move Frum feels is “very dangerous” for the Jewish community here, as it will raise temperatures at home and put “a target on the back of every Jewish Canadian citizen.”
On today’s episode of The CJN’s North Star podcast, host Ellin Bessner is joined by both Linda Frum and UN Watch’s executive director, Hillel Neuer, a Canadian lawyer, to take a look ahead at the UN’s fall agenda and what’s at stake.
Related links
Read the United Nations Watch announcement of former Canadian Senator Linda Frum as the new chair of its board.
Follow UN Watch’s latest research on keeping the UN accountable.
Hear two views of Canada’s plan to recognize Palestine as a state, on The CJN’s North Star podcast.
Credits
Host and writer: Ellin Bessner (@ebessner)
Production team: Zachary Kauffman (senior producer), Andrea Varsany (producer), Michael Fraiman (executive producer)
Music: Bret Higgins
Support our show
Subscribe to The CJN newsletter
Donate to The CJN (+ get a charitable tax receipt)
Subscribe to North Star (Not sure how? Click here)

Sep 5, 2025 • 30min
Harvard experts warn Diaspora Jews are suffering from ‘traumatic invalidation’ after Oct. 7
Diaspora Jews have spent nearly two full years seeing posters of Israeli hostages ripped down in public, hearing chants of “Go back to Poland” in the streets, and seeing Zionists banned from progressive organizations and events. After all that, Diaspora Jews could be suffering from a condition called “traumatic invalidation”. The diagnosis is contained in a research paper published this year by two Jewish Harvard University–affiliated psychologists who specialize in trauma.
The symptoms include anxiety, depression, shame and, in extreme cases, post-traumatic stress disorder. The authors found that Jewish patients reported their pain and trauma after Oct. 7 has been not only widely ignored, but in many cases denied—or even weaponized against them.
Since their study was published by The Journal of Human Behaviour in the Social Environment in May 2025, it has struck a chord among the Canadian Jewish community. That’s why a coalition of Canadian synagogues, Jewish medical professionals and trauma organizations have brought one of the authors to this country this week for a series of public talks.
On today’s episode of The CJN’s North Star podcast, host Ellin Bessner sits down with Dr. Miri Bar-Halpern, a Boston-based clinical psychologist and Harvard lecturer, who is wrapping up her speaking tour in Toronto. She explains why she decided to investigate this subject and offers some tools to help people heal.
Related links
Read Dr. Bar-Halpern and her colleague’s scholarly article, about Oct. 7 and traumatic invalidation, in The Journal of Human Behaviour in the Social Environment (22 pages).
Learn more about Dr. Bar-Halperin, through her website.
Attend the workshop Friday Sept. 5 in Toronto designed for mental health professionals to train them how to better support Jewish patients suffering from traumatic invalidation because of antisemitism.
Credits
Host and writer: Ellin Bessner (@ebessner)
Production team: Zachary Kauffman (senior producer), Andrea Varsany (producer), Michael Fraiman (executive producer)
Music: Bret Higgins
Support our show
Subscribe to The CJN newsletter
Donate to The CJN (+ get a charitable tax receipt)
Subscribe to North Star (Not sure how? Click here)


