FSWC December 10, 2006
Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center FOR HOLOCAUST STUDIES
Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center
For Holocaust Studies
NEWS RELEASE
CONTACT: David Eisenstadt/Leesa Richardson The Communications Group Inc. 416-696-9900 ext 36 or 23 deisenstadt@tcgpr.com/lrichardson@tcgpr.com |
“LAWYERS WITHOUT RIGHTS” EXHIBIT TO APPEAR IN TORONTO FOR THE FIRST TIME
BOB RAE TO SPEAK
TORONTO - To mark the opening Holocaust Education Week (November 1-9/06), former Ontario Premier and Federal Liberal leadershipcandidate Bob Rae will discus how the Nazis twisted the idea of the rule of law, how law was used as an instrument of oppression from 1933-45 and how the Nuremberg Laws became the NurembergTrials. He will also discuss how broad concepts of international and humanitarian law are essential to our ideas of justice today.
This program coincides with the Toronto opening of the highly-acclaimed exhibit LAWYERS WITHOUT RIGHTS: the Fate of Jewish Lawyers in Germany After 1933.
Originally mounted by the German Federal Bar and German Jurists Association, it is sponsored by Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center for Holocaust Studies, theGerman Embassy and the Israel Embassy, and runs throughout the week
Opening Night
When:
Wednesday November 1/06
7:30pm
Where:
Beth Tzedec Congregation
1700 Bathurst St
Toronto
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ABOUT FRIENDS OF SIMON WIESENTHAL CENTER FOR HOLOCAUST STUDIES
Friends of Simon Wiesenthal Center for Holocaust Studies is a Canadian human rights organization dedicated to fostering tolerance and understanding through community involvement, educationaloutreach and social action. With over 40,000 members of all faiths, it confronts important contemporary issues including racism, anti-Semitism, terrorism and genocide. Friends is affiliated withthe world-wide, Los Angeles-based Simon Wiesenthal Center, an accredited Non-Government Organization with status at international agencies, including the United Nations, UNESCO, OSCE and theCouncil of Europe, with offices in New York, Miami, Paris, Jerusalem, BuenosAires, and Toronto. Simon Wiesenthal died in 2005 after devoting his life to preserving the memories of thevictims of the Holocaust, while simultaneously seeking justice for the war criminals.