[Oe List ...] Canada in Mourning - Jack Layton
Ken Fisher
hkf232 at gmail.com
Fri Aug 26 16:46:59 EDT 2011
Well said, Jeanette.
Here is some more about this most remarkable human.
I worked with Jack and Michael Kaufman, in the early 90s to establish what became The White Ribbon Campaign - Men Ending Men's Violence Against Women.
Michael Deloughery was the one who came up with the name of the campaign. Starting mostly in Ottawa in 1991, it is now in some 60 countries around the world, including China, Vietnam and Turkey.
http://www.whiteribbon.ca/international/
In 2003 I was working on the challenge of homelessness for the City of Ottawa. It was Jack Layton who wrote the primer on homelessness in Canada.
In 2007-2009, my son Ajit, was the president of the NDP riding association in Gatineau, Quebec - opposite Ottawa. He met with Jack several times.
Jack was a truly great Saint of all of Canada and of the world.
Ken Fisher
1070 Elizabeth Street Box 75
Sharbot Lake ON K0H 2P0
613.279.1902
wanaki at frontenac.net
On 2011-08-26, at 2:35 PM, Jeanette Stanfield wrote:
Dear Colleagues,
I thought you might wish to know what is happening in Canada this week. The Canadian flag is flying
at half mast. A casket has been viewed by thousands of people in Ottawa and beginning today
in Toronto. A state funeral will be held tomorrow in Toronto where most of the dignitaries of Canada
and many local people will be present. The square outside city hall is covered with tributes on its cement walls and floors, all done
in coloured chalk. The person is Jack Layton, the people's politician if there ever was one. He fought for social justice throughout
his life time and took on many "risky" issues other politicians were afraid to touch. Never a mayor of Toronto but well loved here
never a prime minister of Canada but well respected across the country. I think it is the first time that an opposition leader who has
not been prime minister will have a state funeral.
He changed the landscape of politics in Canada just last spring when he became the leader of the opposition. Over a 10 year
period under his leadership his party the National Democratic Party grew from relative federal obscurity to a major Federal party.
The biggest change in last spring's election happened when Jack captured the dreams and aspirations of many people in Quebec
and a huge number of voters in Quebec voted NDP rather than for candidates of the separatist party. Suddenly Quebec had become
part of the larger Canadian conversation in a whole new way.
During the campaign, Jack was in remission from cancer and recovering from hip surgery but the whole time he remained cheerful,
optimistic and determined. Some people voted for the NDP not perhaps because they were in total agreement policy wise but
because of the integrity of Jack Layton. At the end of July, a gaunt whispering Jack announced that he had a second unnamed cancer.
I spent two hours today reading the tributes at City Hall and watching the people lining up for hours to pay their respects. I saw young and
old of all cultures there in the square just quietly being present . Jack gave people and young people in particular hope and determination to
create a just and loving world for everyone. He wrote a letter of encouragement to all Canadians and to the young people in particular just a
few days before he died. I experienced awe in the heart of Toronto today. Tomorrow that will overflow across the country.
If you wish to know more about Layton and the ceremonies happening, go to cbc news: www.cbc.ca.
Peace,
Jeanette Stanfield
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