The Heritage Front Affair
The information in this report covers several groups and individuals
associated with the extremist right in Canada. To give context to the
persons, groups and events which are described in the other sections
of this report, we have provided a brief overview of how the leadership
and members in the extreme right promote themselves and their ideas
under different names at different times.
We have not tried to be all-inclusive, nor have we tried to offer the
reader an in-depth examination of how extremist groups have evolved.
There are several texts on the market which do this. Rather, we offer
a short "primer" on the antecedents of the Heritage Front.
Differences do exist between the extremist groups, largely as a function
of how drastic their remedies are for the problems they perceive to
exist in Canadian society. Common to most of the organizations listed
below are their doctrines, whether clandestine, to attract a wider range
of support or, as is increasingly the case, blatant. Their fundamental
agreement is the conviction that whites (aryans) are an endangered
species. These beliefs lead, in turn, to their attitudes which are:
anti-Semitic; anti-non whites; anti-immigration/refugee; anti-democratic;
pro-free speech for racist or anti-Semitic ideas; anti-human rights; and
anti-gay. The members tend to drift from one group to another and then
back again in order to realize their xenophobic aims.
1.1 The New Groups
Hate literature, racially motivated crimes, and the rise of political
organizations dedicated to a racist ideology are not new phenomena in
Canada. The Ku Klux Klan, for example, took root in Western Canada in
the 1920's.
Canadian Fascist and Nazi movements replaced the short lived Ku Klux
Klan in the 1930s and 1940s. Adrien Arcand's Parti National Social
Chretien[2] advocated that Fascism was the only solution to the
"Jewish invention" of our system of liberal democracy. Arcand promoted
Hitler as the saviour of Christianity.[3]
In the period immediately after the Second World War, racism and
anti-Semitism lost their popularity, but the concepts did not die.
Arcand, for example, ran for federal election in 1949 under the National
Unity Party, an extension of his previous organization.
Two of the more recent seminal groups in this country's radical right were
the Canadian Nazi Party and the Edmund Burke Society. Together they "paved
the way for the rush of right-wing organizations that would march across
the nation in the decades to follow. "[4]
In 1965, John Beattie formed the Canadian Nazi Party, which marked the
re-emergence of the neo-nazi political movement in Canada. The group
promoted Hitler and his ideas, prompting no fewer than a "dozen
organizations to spring up to do battle" with it.[5] Violent
confrontations took place and Beattie was eventually sent to prison
for six months for public mischief.
In 1967 the Canadian Nazi Party became the National Socialist Party,
again with Beattie as its national leader. He set up a recorded telephone
message line "stating among other things that blacks were being
manipulated by Jew-communists."[6]
Paul Fromm and Donald Andrews (Vilim Zlomislic) founded the Edmund Burke
Society in 1967. This Toronto-based organization, described as "fringe
right" by Stanley Barrett, covered the gamut of right-wing issues,
although anti-communism started out as the main focus of its attack. The
Society openly opposed "immigration, sex education, welfare, homosexuality,
abortion, big government and Pierre Trudeau."[7] Their activities included
the distribution of a newsletter and battles with left-wing groups. [8]
But in practice, "their group was little more than a repository for
mean-spirited racists and anti-Semites."[9] Eventually, some members of
the Society became involved in criminal activities including vandalism,
arson and assault.
1.2 Recent Racism
There was an explosion of right-wing activity in the 1970's and 1980's.
According to Barrett, in 1987 there were close to 130 different groups
functioning in the right wing milieu.[l0] As the author stated, the
radical right started out as anticommunists, but over time, they adopted
the politics of racial purity and anti-Semitism.[11]
In February 1972, the Edmund Burke Society became the Western Guard.
Under Donald Andrews, the group's orientation changed from countering
communism to vilifying Jews and non-whites. Those who were non-violent,
such as Paul Fromm, left the Western Guard,[12] and were replaced by
overtly racist members who pushed the group towards a more aggressive
white supremacist and anti-Semitic platform. [13]
In 1973, the Western Guard set up a telephone hateline. Six years later,
the line was "cut" by the Canadian Human Rights Commission which deemed
it discriminatory. The same scenario would be repeated two decades later,
this time in regard to the Heritage Front. Andrews had the dubious
distinction of being the first person in Canada charged with wilfully
promoting hatred.[14] In 1975, he faced offenses ranging from plotting
arson, possession of weapons and explosives, and mischief. He was
sentenced to two years in jail for conspiring to bomb a visiting Israeli
soccer team. Consequently, the leadership fell to John Ross Taylor in 1976.
Ordered by the Courts to stay away from the Western Guard, on his release
in 1977 Andrews created the Nationalist Party of Canada. The Party's
activities and beliefs were similar to those of the Western Guard. The
Party appealed to the basest instincts of those who joined it:
anti-immigrant, anti-gay, fearful of the disappearance of the white race
around the world, anti-affirmative action, anti-Black, and anti-Jewish.
In the mid-1980s the Toronto membership varied between 150 to 300 persons
depending up on who was cited. [15]
Paul Fromm went on to form two new fringe right wing organizations:
Citizens for Foreign Aid Reform (C-FAR) and the Canadian Association for
Free Expression (CAFE). C-FAR attacks Canadian foreign aid and immigration
policies. CAFE, founded in 1981, focuses on issues of free speech. The
individuals and groups defended by this organization are generally from the
radical right, and include such Holocaust deniers as
Ernst Zundel,
Jim Keegstra and
Malcolm Ross.
In Alberta, a white supremacist umbrella group started to take shape in the
early 1980s. In 1984, Terry Long's
Aryan Nations (AN) finally received
official recognition from the
American leader of the Church of Jesus Christ
Christian - Aryan Nations.[16] The AN advocates violence to establish an
all Aryan state and is vehemently anti-Semitic and anti-Black. Associated
with the AN was another militant group called the Aryan Resistance Movement
(ARM). ARM, based in British Columbia, supports the extreme right-wing
philosophy of the superiority of the white race and violently opposes those
considered to be "non-white". ARM's Nazi publications are the "amongst the
most venomous in the country.''[17]
Wolfgang Droege was a member of the
Western Guard in the mid-seventies
before switching his efforts to the Ku Klux Klan (RKK) in 1979. Droege,
along with Alexander McQuirter, was instrumental in increasing the
membership in the group to an estimated 2,500 in 1980 18 At this time,
the KKK and
Don Andrews' Nationalist Party of Canada formed a temporary
merger But
Droege was convicted and imprisoned in the United States for
his part in the plot to overthrow the Government of Dominica and on
several drug and weapons charges. McQuirter quit the Klan at the same
time and, soon afterwards, was facing conspiracy to murder charges. In
their absence, the KKK slowly disappeared.[19]
1.3 The l990's
The early 1990's belong to the Heritage Front and racist skinheads.
Disgruntled members of the Nationalist Party formed the Heritage Front
in the Fall of 1989. In a few short years, the Heritage Front became the
most prominent white supremacist group in Canada. The Heritage Front also
became embroiled in a series of legal actions by the Canadian Human Rights
Commission - and the Federal Court involving their telephone "hate
line." Currently, a number of HF members are facing assault, robbery,
contempt of court and other charges.
The Heritage Front worked closely with other groups such as the
Church of
the Creator (COTC), which was led by
George Burdi. He was said to be the
second in command of the Heritage Front. The militant and action-oriented
COTC disbanded in 1993 with the leader making racist recordings in the wake
of arrests and criminal charges laid against
Eric Fischer and
Burdi. The
members remain active, nonetheless.
COTC followers have joined the Heritage Front and the Northern Hammerskins,
a racist skinhead group which is potentially more violent than its
predecessor. Other neo-nazi skinhead groups such as the Aryan Resistance
Movement and the Alberta-based Final Solution Skinheads are organizing and
finding a place in the extreme-right network in Canada. [20]
To avoid prosecution and violation of bail or release conditions, many white
supremacists in North America are reorganizing under the concept of
"individual leadership". Members of extremist groups are conducting "business
as usual" but they are trying to do so as individuals. The trend is away from
identifiable groups whose leaders can be charged for the criminal acts of
those they influence.
Footnotes:
1. See Stanley R. Barrett, "Is God a Racist. The Right Wing in Canada",
Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1987; Warren Kinsella, "Unholy
Alliances", Toronto: Lester Publishing Limited, 1992; Warren
Kinsella, "Web of Hate. Inside Canada's Far Right Network",
Toronto: Harper Collins, 1994.
2. The Party expanded into Ontario as the National Christian Party
of Canada and was renamed in the post-war period as the National
Unity Party.
3. Barrett, 1987, p.22.
4. Barrett, p.41.
5. Barrett, p.45.
6. Barrett, p.47.
7. Kinsella, 1994, p.207.
8. Stanley Barrett speculated that the group might have been started
by police agencies seeking to undermine the left wing and to engage
in agent provocateur activity (p.70).
9. Kinsella, 1992, p. 103.
10. Barrett, Appendix.
11. Barrett, p.30.
12. Fromm spoke at the Western Guard's founding meeting, attended by a
leading American Ku Klux Klan leader. Barrett, p 75.
13. Kinsella, 1994, p. 208.
14. Kinsella, 1994, p.239.
15. Barrett, p. 106
16. Barrett, p. 172
17. Kinsella, 1994, p.53
18. Kinsella, 1994, p.217.
19. Kinsella, 1994, p. 220.
20. Kinsella, 1994, pp 266-281
The
original plaintext version
of this file is available via
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Report to the Solicitor General of Canada
Security Intelligence Review Committee
December 9, 1994
I. Overview of the Extreme Right