Toronto rally reflects broad Iranian diaspora unity amid political divides
TORONTO – On February 14, 2026, North Toronto became the site of what organizers and police described as the largest demonstration by Iranians ever held in Canada. The rally, which followed a call by Crown Prince Reza Pahlavi for coordinated gatherings in Toronto, Munich, and Los Angeles, was organized in response to the Islamic Republic’s violent crackdown during the nationwide protests of December 2025–January 2026.
Toronto Police estimated attendance at approximately 350,000 people—an unusually large mobilization for a diaspora community in Canada. Participants travelled not only from across the Greater Toronto Area, but also from other parts of Ontario, Quebec, Montreal, and cities in the northeastern United States. Non-Iranian supporters also joined the demonstration.
Beyond its size, the rally was notable for the political breadth of its participants. Monarchists, republicans, and politically unaffiliated individuals marched side by side—an alignment that has historically proven difficult within segments of the Iranian diaspora. While ideological differences remain significant, the event suggested a temporary convergence around shared objectives: support for the Iranian people’s demands for freedom, opposition to the Islamic Republic, and calls for stronger international backing, particularly from the Canadian government.
The scale and cross-factional participation of the Toronto rally underscore both the organizational capacity of the Iranian diaspora and the continuing resonance of political developments inside Iran. Whether this moment of unity will translate into sustained coordination remains uncertain, but the turnout signalled a clear message: developments in Iran continue to mobilize large segments of the community abroad.
Article by Mohammad Tajdolati, President & Editor in Chief of the magazine “Persian Mirror”
Here below is a video report published on the Persian Mirror YouTube Channel; in the following pics, some moments of the rally in Toronto (photos courtesy of Mohammad Tajdolati)





