The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Barrick Gold founder dies at age 90

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Barrick Gold Corp.’s visionary founder Peter Munk, a man of lofty global ambitions who fulfilled them like few others, died Wednesday at the age of 90.

He racked up an impressive series of accomplish­ments in everything from custom stereos to tropical resorts, and establishe­d himself as one of Canada’s great entreprene­urs.

Munk will always be most renowned, however, as the founder and builder of one of the world’s largest gold mining empires while at the helm of Barrick Gold. It was there where he most displayed his willingnes­s to take risks, spot overlooked opportunit­ies, and challenge the status quo.

He was born in Budapest in 1927 and fled Hungary with his family in 1944 when Nazi Germany invaded.

He arrived in Toronto in 1948 at age 20 and undertook a number of entreprene­urial business activities before founding Barrick in 1983.

“This is a country that does not ask about your origins, but concerns itself with your destiny,” Munk said in 2011.

He is survived by Melanie, his wife of 45 years; five children, Anthony, Nina, Marc-David, Natalie, and Cheyne; and 14 grandchild­ren.

Munk, whose cause of death was not disclosed, leaves behind a legacy of business success, charitable donations, and an outspoken defender of the benefits of capitalism.

Toronto-based Barrick Gold grew into one of the world’s biggest gold producers under Munk’s leadership.

“When I joined Barrick in 2002, the company was in the news on an almost daily basis,” said Barrick President Kelvin Dushnisky.

“Words like innovative, entreprene­urial, instinctiv­e, agile and astute were used regularly to describe the company. They could just as easily have been talking about Peter Munk himself, and, in many ways they were. Barrick is, after all, an extension of Peter’s personalit­y.”

 ?? CP FILE PHOTO ?? Barrick Gold chairman Peter Munk is shown in Toronto, December 4, 2013.
CP FILE PHOTO Barrick Gold chairman Peter Munk is shown in Toronto, December 4, 2013.

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