Howard Galganov - Biography

Howard Galganov (born February 12, 1950 in Montreal, Quebec, Canada) was briefly a political activist and radio personality in Montreal during the late 1990s. He made headlines in Quebec for being a vocal and confrontational opponent of the Charter of the French Language and Quebec nationalism as one of the most prominent leaders of the short-lived “angryphone” movement, before moving to Ontario and criticising official bilingualism in Canada.

Youth

Galganov reportedly had an activist history. His grandfather, a Russian Jew, came to Canada to escape communism. In the 1960s, as a member of the Jewish Defense League, Galganov threw coffins on the Soviet embassy lawn in Ottawa to protest the treatment of Jewish "refuseniks".

Quebec Activism

By the 1990s, Howard Galganov had become an outspoken critic of the Quebec sovereignty movement and of the Canadian government for not defending the rights of English-speaking citizens living in the Canadian province of Quebec, because he believes that forcing him to do business in French would mean that he would make less money, given that English is the international language of business and that the French-Canadians have been kept poorer thanks to various Canadian policies, both public and private.

After a 1995 Quebec referendum on sovereignty for the province of Quebec, Galganov founded the Quebec Political Action Committee (QPAC), serving as its president (and only member) until 2000. One of Galganov’s first prominent QPAC activities was to organize a protest at Fairview Pointe-Claire, a shopping mall, in 1996 in the predominantly anglophone West Island of Montreal to protest that retail stores were not placing the maximum amount of English on their commercial signs as allowed under the Charter of the French Language. Estimated attendance at the protest varied from 500 to 5,000. Galganov followed up this protest with threatened boycotts of prominent retail stores. He also protested the actions of the Office québécois de la langue française on numerous issues including when language inspectors ordered stores to remove kosher products from their shelves just before Passover because they weren't labelled in the French language. These activities caused a reaction among fringe Quebec nationalist groups, garnering publicity for Galganov.

Later in 1996, he gave a speech at the Harvard Club of New York, in spite of requests not to do so from federal and provincial officials concerned that it might discourage foreign investment in Canada; the speech went ahead but was poorly attended. In 1997, he opened a store deliberately violating the commercial sign provisions of the Charter of the French Language in order to provoke the officials in charge of enforcing the law to prosecute him. The officials ignored the store and it closed due to low customer support.

After his QPAC activities, Galganov attempted several more politically related activities. In June 1997, he unsuccessfully ran for parliament as an independent, coming in a distant second. In 1997, he started hosting an AM radio talk show on Montreal radio station CIQC-AM, first in the morning and then at noon. He was on the air for more than a year before his show was cancelled due to low ratings (replaced in the morning show by Montreal broadcaster Jim Duff), but did help to rally support for William Johnson in his run for the leadership of Alliance Quebec. He also unsuccessfully ran for mayor of the town of Saint-Lazare, Quebec, placing a distant third.

Ontario Activism

Shortly after his Saint-Lazare mayoralty campaign, he moved to eastern Ontario. He ran as an independent candidate in the Ontario riding of Stormont-Dundas-South Glengarry in the federal election of October 14, 2008, advocating an end to official bilingualism and the separation of Quebec from Canada; he finished fourth with 5.7% of the vote.

On March 22, 2010, Ottawa-based dailies reported that Galganov distributed 5,200 (or 6,124) copies of a 12-page (or 10-page) English-only brochure entitled How to wipe-out the Franco Ontarian Language & Culture. Galganov is challenging in provincial court a regulation on mandatory bilingual sign adopted on June 16, 2008 by the township of Russell. He claims that the regulation, by making French-only or English-only signs illegal, is threatening the French language in Ontario. Galganov's associate is Elizabeth Trudeau, an official spokesperson for Canadians for Language Fairness, which battles bilingual legislation in Canada, claiming that it elevates "French speakers to first-class status and the rest of us to second and third-class status.".







המאמר מזכיר את האנשים הבאים: Howard Galganov

המידע הזה מתפרסם לפי רישיון לשימוש חופשי במסמכים של גנו (GFDL)
אתה צריך להכנס למערכת על מנת לערוך את המאמר

תגובות

Please log in / register, to leave a comment

ברוכים הבאים ל JewAge!
חפש מידע אודות מקורות משפחתך