- Howard Galganov
Howard Galganov (born
February 12 ,1950 inMontreal ,Quebec ,Canada ) was briefly a politicalactivist andradio personality in Montreal during the late 1990s. He made headlines in Quebec for being a vocal and confrontational opponent of theCharter of the French Language andQuebec nationalism as one of the most prominent leaders of the short-lived “angryphone” movement.Youth
Galganov reportedly had a militant history. His grandfather, a
Russia nJew , came to Canada to escapecommunism . In the 1960s, as a member of theJewish Defense League , Galganov threw coffins on theSoviet embassy lawn inOttawa to protest the treatment of Jewish "refuseniks ". [ ^ [http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_qn4158/is_19960901/ai_n14054664/ The Independent: Canada learns a new language of protest] ]Language Activism
By the 1990s, Howard Galganov had become an outspoken critic of the
Quebec sovereignty movement and of the Federal government for not defending the rights of English-speaking citizens living in the Canadian province of Quebec. After a1995 Quebec referendum on sovereignty for the province ofQuebec , 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 atFairview Pointe-Claire , a shopping mall, in 1996 in the predominantly anglophoneWest Island of Montreal to protest that retail stores were not placing the maximum amount of English on their commercial signs as allowed under theCharter 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 theOffice québécois de la langue française on numerous issues including when language inspectors ordered stores to removekosher products from their shelves just beforePassover because they weren't labelled in theFrench language . These activities caused a reaction among fringe Quebec nationalist groups, garnering publicity for Galganov.In late 1996, Galganov was invited to speak at the
Harvard Club of New York about Quebec politics. Both federalist and sovereignist politicians asked that he not give the speech, concerned that business leaders in New York would conclude that Quebec was too politically volatile to invest. Galganov went ahead with the speech, but it was poorly-attended. [ [http://www.canadianencyclopedia.ca/index.cfm?PgNm=TCE&Params=M1ARTM0010993/ MacLean's Magazine: Galganov's Anglo Rights Crusade] ]Other activities
From 1997 to 2000, Galganov attempted several more political activities. 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, but they ignored the store and it closed due to low customer support. In June 1997, he unsuccessfully ran for parliament as an independent, coming in a distant second. In 1998, he hosted an AM radio
talk show on Montrealradio station CIQC-AM, first in the morning and then at noon. It was quickly cancelled due to low ratings, but did help to rally support for William Johnson in his run for the leadership ofAlliance Quebec . He wrote a book, which had moderate commercial success in Montreal. He also unsuccessfully ran formayor of the town ofSaint-Lazare, Quebec , placing a distant third. Shortly thereafter, he moved toOntario and ceased political activity in Quebec. He is running as an independent candidate in the riding of Stormont-Dundas-South Glengarry in the federal election scheduled for October 14, 2008, advocating the separation of Quebec from Canada.References
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