Mr. Chair, we have talked about how well Canada is doing, relatively speaking, and how other countries are doing in this area.
We brought up the United Nations several times in tonight's debate, and a lot of the time it has been about how the UN as a body, in my view, has let the side down, has let the cause of anti-Semitism down, because of all the instances where bodies of the United Nations have voted unanimously, or in a majority fashion, to condemn Israel above all other states combined.
It does not imbue one with a lot of optimism from the point of view of the international community, as embodied by the United Nations, that we in the world writ large are acting to stamp out anti-Semitism.
I know my colleague, the minister, has great experience in those kinds of environments, in the UN, international politics, and international arenas. I wonder if he could comment on the state of the United Nations and the way that body and its member states are collectively approaching this challenge, and what we can perhaps do as a smallish member of that body to help it change the course a little.