The McGill Tribune Vol. 29 Issue 6

Page 1

NHL SEASON PREVIEW, PAGES 22 & 23

POST POP REVIEW, PAGES 12,13 &15

iMCGlLL Published by the Students’ Society of McGill University

TRIBUNE www.mcstilltribune.com

Vol. 29 Issue 6 • Tuesday, October 6. 2009

Faculty o f E ducation w elcom es D alai L am a to M cG ill ADAM SCOTTI Production Manager

Addressing a crowd of 500 education students and faculty in Pollack Hall, the Dalai Lama brought his message of religious toler­ ance and compassion for others to McGill this past Saturday. After visits to Vancouver and Calgary, the 74-year-old exiled spiritual leader of Tibet chose Montreal as his third and final stop in Canada. McGill was first approached a year ago by the office of the Dalai Lama to host a talk between his Holiness and education stu­ dents from six French and English Quebec universities. The Quebec Ministry of Education ’s con­ troversial introduction of a compulsory ethics and religions course sparked the Dalai Lam a’s interest in holding an event in Quebec. He ap­ plauded the province’s efforts to teach toler­ ance in a secular setting, saying that “compas­ sion, ethics and ecology should be a part of education.” Throughout his speech, the Dalai Lama covered topics such as compassion, religious tolerance, and society’s obsession with money. When Principal Heather Monroe-Blum asked a question on behalf of a Laval student on the definition of religion, the Dalai Lama re-

The Dalai Lama reaches in for a handshake following his address at the Bell Centre on Saturday.

ADAM SCOTTI

See DALAI LAMA on PAGE 3

Choose Life proceeds with controversial “Echos of the Holocaust” Jose Ruba speaks in Shatner STEVEN HOFFER News Editor

The students’ society pro-life club Choose Life hosted an unadvertized closed club event with controversial pro-life advocate Jose Ruba, co-founder of the Canadian Centre for Bio-ethical Reform, in the Shatner building’s Lev Buhkman Room last night. Because the SSMU executive was unaware of the event. Ruba’s arrival brought on a degree of panic

as the executives discussed their course of ac­ tion. This incident follows Choose Life’s deci­ sion to proceed with hosting Ruba’s pro-life presentation, “Echoes of the Holocaust,” de­ spite a SSMU council motion last Thursday censuring the advertised event. Today’s lec­ ture, which will present abortion parallel to the atrocities of the Holocaust, is scheduled to take place this evening from six to eight p.m. in Leacock 232. According to Natalie Fohl, president and founder of Choose Life, yesterday’s program

was an “apologetic training event” which aimed to facilitate discussion among pro-life supporters and help them feel comfortable speaking about abortion. “ [Monday’s meeting was] a talk just for the pro-life students, giving them a little bit of the rationale for the pro-life position and why it makes good sense to be pro-life,” said Ruba in an interview wth the Tribune. “A lot of people think that what we are saying is offen­ sive and it’s true, but if abortion kills a human being then what is offensive is killing human beings. When we talk about abortion in the

context of these past genocides ... then it is common sense to say that this is just as bad as the Holocaust because we have actually killed more people with abortion than with these past genocides.” Following yesterday’s incident, SSMU Vice-President Clubs and Services Sarah Olle explained the executive’s reasons fof~allowing M onday’s meeting to take place, despite Cou­ ch's censure. “We figured that what should apply here was what was decided by Council

See FOHL on PAGE 6

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