Tuesday, December 23, 2025
ADVT 
National

Ontario judge Mahmud Jamal nominated to top court

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 17 Jun, 2021 12:46 PM
  • Ontario judge Mahmud Jamal nominated to top court

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau has nominated Ontario judge Mahmud Jamal to the Supreme Court of Canada.

Jamal, who would be the first person of colour to sit on the top court, was a longtime litigator before becoming a judge of the Ontario Court of Appeal two years ago.

As a lawyer he appeared in dozens of appeals before the Supreme Court on a wide variety of issues.

Jamal, fluent in English and French, also taught constitutional law at McGill University and administrative law at Osgoode Hall Law School.

Born in Kenya in 1967, to a family originally from India, Jamal moved two years later to Britain. He was raised in England, and completed high school in Edmonton before pursuing a bachelor of arts at the University of Toronto and law studies at McGill and Yale University in the United States.

He would fill the vacancy on the top court created by the retiring Rosalie Abella.

In a questionnaire submitted as part of his application to the Supreme Court, Jamal said that because he attended Anglican schools, he received a hybrid religious and cultural upbringing.

"I was raised at school as a Christian, reciting the Lord's Prayer and absorbing the values of the Church of England, and at home as a Muslim, memorizing Arabic prayers from the Qur'an and living as part of the Ismaili community," Jamal wrote.

"Like many others, I experienced discrimination as a fact of daily life. As a child and youth, I was taunted and harassed because of my name, religion or the colour of my skin."

In 1981, Jamal's family moved to Canada, settling in Edmonton where he completed high school.

"Our first few years here were hard. My parents struggled to make ends meet. They opened a restaurant and dreamed of financial stability but were soon left bankrupt," Jamal wrote. "Despite their challenges, they always encouraged education."

Jamal says his wife also came to Canada as a teenager, a refugee from Iran fleeing the persecution of the Bahá'í religious minority during the 1979 Revolution.

She spent several years in the Philippines before being welcomed by Canada and settling in Innisfail, Alta.

After they married, Jamal became a Bahá'í, attracted by the faith's message of the spiritual unity of humankind, and the couple raised their two children in Toronto’s multi-ethnic Bahá'í community.

"These experiences exposed me to some of the challenges and aspirations of immigrants, religious minorities, and racialized persons," Jamal wrote. "My perspectives on these issues have broadened and deepened over more than 25 years as a lawyer and judge."

Members of the House of Commons justice committee and Senate committee on legal affairs, along with a member of the federal Green party, will soon take part in a question-and-answer session with Jamal.

The session will be moderated by Marie-Eve Sylvestre, dean of the civil law section at the University of Ottawa's faculty of law.

Photo courtesy of Twitter. 

MORE National ARTICLES

Vancouver Police appeal for witnesses in the homicide of Mr.Manoj Kumar

Vancouver Police appeal for witnesses in the homicide of Mr.Manoj Kumar
Just after 8:30 p.m. on April 16, 2019, Vancouver Police received several 9-1-1 calls reporting shots being fired against Kumar in the area of West 4th Avenue and Burrard Street. Mr. Kumar tragically died at the scene. 

Vancouver Police appeal for witnesses in the homicide of Mr.Manoj Kumar

Expectations high as Liberals ready budget

Expectations high as Liberals ready budget
Provinces will be looking for more health-care cash, small businesses for an extension of emergency aid, and credit-rating agencies for certainty that historic deficits and debts will be tamed over time.

Expectations high as Liberals ready budget

Feds pressed to push back tax-filing deadline

Feds pressed to push back tax-filing deadline
Quebec on Thursday announced it was pushing back the filing deadline until the end of May and waiving charging interest on balances owing through the same month

Feds pressed to push back tax-filing deadline

Trudeau sending Ontario help, Pfizer supply bolstered

Trudeau sending Ontario help, Pfizer supply bolstered
Trudeau announced Friday a contract with Pfizer for an additional eight million doses of their vaccine, hours after Canada said its incoming supply from Moderna would be slashed in half through the rest of April.

Trudeau sending Ontario help, Pfizer supply bolstered

Opposition urged to speed up net-zero carbon bill

Opposition urged to speed up net-zero carbon bill
If debate does not end today, Wilkinson asks opposition leaders to consider supporting the government's use of what he calls "the parliamentary tools available" to force an end to second reading debate.

Opposition urged to speed up net-zero carbon bill

P.1 likely highest in B.C. due to testing: doctor

P.1 likely highest in B.C. due to testing: doctor
Overall, just under 60 per cent of daily cases involve variants, including the one first associated with South Africa, though those cases are negligible compared with P.1 and the variant first identified in the United Kingdom.

P.1 likely highest in B.C. due to testing: doctor