Mr. Chair, yes we have in fact. The best practices in combatting anti-Semitism have been and are being shared through the Inter-parliamentary Coalition for Combating Antisemitism, which Canada hosted and chaired in 2010. It produced the Ottawa protocol, which I would like to table before the committee.
I am pleased to report to the committee that the Government of Canada has been the only executive branch of government in the world to date to have signed its endorsement of the Ottawa protocol, which really is a distillation of best practices in part in combatting anti-Semitism.
One of the most effective antidotes to anti-Semitism is Holocaust education, because that gets right at the heart of the issue. That is why we have placed a particularly strong emphasis on increasing Holocaust education, both in the school system by providing curricular material to provinces and school boards, and also in a general public sense.
To give the member one example, we recently launched an educational tour bus organized by the Simon Wiesenthal Centre in Canada that will visit schools and provide a learning platform on anti-Semitism and other forms of xenophobia. So we are supporting projects of that nature.