Victoria Times-Colonist April 20, 1996 (B2) FREE SPEECH Botting comes face-to-face with past by Kim Westad Times Colonist staff Victoria lawyer Gary Botting tried to lay his past to rest Friday, when he dumped a plaque commending him for free speech through the mail slot at Doug Christie's downtown law kiosk. Botting said he waqs 'duped' a decade ago when he accepted the engraved plaque from the Canadian Free Speech League. Botting hoped to hand it to Christie, a Victoria-based lawyer who has gained notoriety nationwide for defending people accused of promoting anti-Semitism. Christie was also the lawyer for the Free Speech League. But Christie wasn't at the tiny Courtney Street office, and did not return calls for comment. Botting called the gesture symbolic: today is 10 years to the day since he was given the award. It is also Hitler's birthday. Some members of the Jewish community saw it as more self-serving. 'The gesture of popping an award through a keyhole strikes us as being rather theatrical and not sufficient proof that he really has changed,' said Sol Littman, Canadian director for the Simon Wiesenthal Centre, 'although another possibility is that he has had a genuine change of heart and that he wants now to renounce his past.' robert Haymond is a local psychologist and a member of the steering committee of B'nai Brith. He said Friday that Botting's act was anything but self-serving. 'He gained nothing by it personally and in fact took a risk. And I would say simply he did the honorable thing,' said Haymond. Dumping the plaque was Botting's latest effort to dissociate himself from Holocaust-denier Ernst Zundel. Botting said Zundel is unfairly using a taped interview he and Zundel made in 1986 as part of a program to 'try to legitimize Holocaust denial, and therefore anti-Semitism, and therefore racism.' The tape was made willingly, Botting said. But he described it as an attempt to restate some of the principles of free speech he had espoused in testimony at Zundel's first trial. Zundel was charged in 1983 with knowingly spreading false news about the Holocaust. He was convicted in 1988 but was acquitted four years later after the Supreme Court of Canada struck down the law. Botting said he had been asked to testify at the trial as an expert in the area of censorship. Zundel's lawyer was Christie. Botting would later go on to be an articling law student with Christie. Botting said video copies of the interview are being offered for sale through the Zundel Internet site, and if the practice isn't stopped, he will pursue legal action against Zundel. The Wiesenthal Centre has a file on Botting, and will continue it until the day he dies. 'We have kept research material on all those people associated with Zundel, because we consider Zundel to be a threat to Canadian society,' said Littman. = 30 =
Home ·
Site Map ·
What's New? ·
Search
Nizkor
© The Nizkor Project, 1991-2012
This site is intended for educational purposes to teach about the Holocaust and
to combat hatred.
Any statements or excerpts found on this site are for educational purposes only.
As part of these educational purposes, Nizkor may
include on this website materials, such as excerpts from the writings of racists and antisemites. Far from approving these writings, Nizkor condemns them and
provides them so that its readers can learn the nature and extent of hate and antisemitic discourse. Nizkor urges the readers of these pages to condemn racist
and hate speech in all of its forms and manifestations.