Thank you, Madam Chair.
Thank you, esteemed witnesses, for joining us this morning. Your testimony is important.
As far as I'm concerned, I'm learning things. I learned some at the meetings we held on anti‑Semitism, and this morning I'm learning some about Islam. I don't think we've finished learning.
I'll pick up on what Mr. Islam just said: Maybe we don't know enough about Islam, the Muslim religion, and maybe there's a need, indeed, to know more about the precepts of this religion.
That said, we all want to have a safe living environment, obviously. We want our streets to be safe, and we want everyone to be able to live the religion of their choice freely and without persecution.
Recently, the Standing Committee on Justice and Human Rights has focused a lot on anti‑Semitism. Now, we're looking at the issue of Islamophobia.
Mr. Islam, should we treat all forms of discrimination equally? Think, for example, of Islamophobia, anti‑Semitism, racism, which you were just talking about, or discrimination based on skin colour or sexual orientation. All of this is detrimental to maintaining a healthy climate in Canada and Quebec. In your opinion, should we treat all these forms of discrimination in the same way, or are there particular challenges that we need to tackle differently, particularly in the case of Islamophobia?
Mr. Islam, my question is for you.
Madam Chair, can the witness hear me?