Paul Fromm - Canada

 

 

Paul Fromm, 55, is the director of the Canadian Association for

 Free Expression. 

 

CAFE is Canada's leading free speech advocacy group and has
taken a lead role in defending dissident Ernst Zündel and in raising
support and funds for his defence.

Mr. Fromm earned his B.A., B.Ed. and M.A. in English literature and
linguistics from the University of Toronto. He pursued further 

studies  at the University of Waterloo, San Francisco 

University and Webster College in Missouri.

His work defending free speech has won him international recognition. 

 

He was the 1995 recipient of the George Orwell Free Speech Award presented by the Canadian Free Speech League and the 2002 Doug Collins Free Speech Award presented at David Irving's Real History Conference. He has spoken on the deteriorating free speech situation in Canada at the Barnes Review, the Real History Conference and before meetings of the Council of Conservative Citizens in the U.S.A.

Mr. Fromm divides his political efforts between the struggle for free
speech and immigration reform. In 1997, after a campaign of defamation and agitation led by the Canadian Jewish Congress and the League for Human Rights of B'nai Brith, Mr. Fromm was fired from his position as an instructor in English after a 25 year career. Despite being called "an exemplary teacher" by a former Director of Education at the Peel Board of Education, Mr. Fromm has fired solely for his political views expressed on his own time outside school hours. He joins a number of other Canadian teachers disciplined or dismissed for holding politically incorrect views.

He edits the FREE SPEECH MONITOR and the CANADIAN IMMIGRATION HOTLINE and regularly lectures across Canada.

 

You may contact Paul Fromm at

 

1315038@primus.ca


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