Edmonton Journal

Jim Keegstra’s haunted legacy

Hate-monger forced Alberta to confront its dark demons

- PAULA SIMO NS psimons @edmontonjo­urnal. com Twit ter.com/Paulatics edmontonjo­urnal.com Paula Simons is on Fac ebook . To join th e conversati­on , go to www.facebook.com/ EJ Paula Simons or visit h er blog at edmontonjo­urnal. com/Paulatics

How should we respond to hate-mongers?

Especially in this day of the Internet, when vile trolls spewing crackpot conspiracy theories of every toxic variety can easily reach hundreds of thousands of people, how, if at all, should we regulate hate speech?

Alberta’s most infamous hate-monger, the teacher and politician Jim Keegstra died last week, at 80, the Red Deer Advocate reported.

If you didn’t live through Alberta’s Keegstra era, it might be hard to understand how his story rocked our province, how his smug, leering face haunted our political discourse and our public imaginatio­n.

In 1981, Susan Maddox, an Eckville mother, became concerned about what her son Paul was learning in his social studies class. Keegstra, Paul’s teacher and the town mayor, was teaching students the Holocaust was a hoax, faked as part of a giant internatio­nal Jewish conspiracy to control the world, that Jews were child killers who controlled the economy. He also taught students that Catholics were morally corrupt and morally inferior to Protestant­s.

Maddox complained. It wasn’t the first time someone had raised concerns. In 1978, Keegstra had been asked to limit his anti-Catholic rhetoric. But he’d kept his job. This time, the school district warned him to stop teaching his students about Jewish conspiraci­es. Almost a year passed, with Keegstra still in the classroom, still teaching his hate. Finally, in December of 1982, the board fired him for defying them.

The Alberta Teachers’ Associatio­n immediatel­y pledged its support for Keegstra and vowed to appeal his firing to the courts. His students started a petition of support for their teacher. The Maddox family was bombarded by hate mail.

The public reaction was as disturbing as Keegstra’s teachings. How was an unapologet­ic hate-monger allowed to poison the minds of children, year after year without anyone speaking out? How could his colleagues, students, and neighbours go on giving interviews about what a great guy he was? It was hard to know what to blame on moral cowardice, what to blame on ignorance, and what to blame on racism.

As the months and years went on, the Keegstra affair became a legal circus. He appealed his dismissal, but in 1984, his teaching certificat­e was finally revoked.

That same year, he was charged with the wilful promotion of hatred. That case, which was fought all the way to the Supreme Court and back again, finally concluded in 1996, with a conviction and a sentence of 200 hours of community service.

The landmark legal precedent establishe­d the constituti­onality of Canada’s hate speech legislatio­n. Yet far from silencing Keegstra, 12 years of appeals and retrials gave him a platform to posture as a free speech martyr and defender of civil liberties. He basked in national notoriety. In 1987, he even served, albeit briefly, as the leader of the federal Social Credit Party.

It was a frightenin­g time in Alberta. Fuelled, perhaps, by post-NEP economic frustratio­n, violent anti-Semitism seemed to flourish.

In 1988, police in Calgary foiled a Ku Klux Klan plot to blow up the Calgary Jewish Centre and murder Jewish businessma­n Harold Milavsky.

In1 990, Terry Long’s Aryan Nation held an “Aryan Fest’’ at Provost, which featured a huge swastika flag and cross-burning, accompanie­d by chants of “Death to the Jews.”

Did the extended prosecutio­n of Keegstra make such hateful viciousnes­s worse? It’s not easy to judge.

The Keegstra affair did lead to the establishm­ent of the Committee on Tolerance and Understand­ing, led by Ron Ghitter. It did force Alberta to confront its demons, to have gut-wrenching public debate about racism, and about the duty of citizens to stand up to hatred, as Susan Maddox bravely did.

Today, it’s unlikely an Alberta teacher could get away with preaching unvarnishe­d hatred for as long as Keegstra did.

But Keegstra’s spiritual kin — the Truthers, the Birthers, the False Flaggers, the homophobes, the conspiracy theorists of all strains — flourish in today’s social media ecosystem, cross-pollinatin­g their lies and paranoia, feeding on fear, loathing and misinforma­tion. And we still haven’t found a way to balance freedom of speech, with the rights of the vulnerable to be protected from the provocatio­ns of bigotry.

Here’s what I learned from Keegstra. Courts and cops can’t stop hate. We must fight lies with truth, ignorance with knowledge. Since we cannot silence all the evil, noxious speech in the world, we must instead teach our children and ourselves to think critically and debate freely.

Let that, please, be Keegstra’s last lesson.

 ?? T H E C A NA D I A N P R E SS/ F I L E S ?? The spiritual kin of Alberta hate-monger Jim Keegstra flourish in today’s social media ecosystem, Paula Simons writes.
T H E C A NA D I A N P R E SS/ F I L E S The spiritual kin of Alberta hate-monger Jim Keegstra flourish in today’s social media ecosystem, Paula Simons writes.
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada