National Kindness Week takes on different meaning after Tumbler Ridge shooting
OTTAWA — Parliamentarians from all parties came together Wednesday to mark National Kindness Week — but the message is taking on a different meaning after the mass shooting in Tumbler Ridge, B.C.
National Kindness Week, which runs from Feb. 15 to 21, honours a movement started by the late Ottawa Rabbi Reuven Bulka, who encouraged small acts of kindness that can have lasting impacts. The rabbi had long pushed for the adoption of a National Kindness Week.
Interim NDP leader Don Davies said there’s a “cruel irony” and “profound symmetry” to marking the Kindness Week just hours after a senseless tragedy, but the week’s message is a reminder of the importance of empathy.
“At a time when the world feels increasingly defined by division, conflict and even hatred. This shared commitment matters. It reminds us that in moments of tension and uncertainty, what people need the most isn’t sharper rhetoric or tougher posturing but more kindness and gentleness,” Davies said.
