The Canadian Fuhrer: The Life of Adrien Arcand

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James Lorimer & Company, Sep 30, 2011 - Biography & Autobiography - 360 pages

The Canadian Fuhrer is the story the emergence of prominent fascist leader Adrien Arcand and a dark chapter in Canada's past.

During the 1930s, when the misery of hunger, unemployment and the threat of war shadowed life for many, Canadians were drawn to a wide range of new political ideas. Communism, socialism, and the social credit movement all attracted supporters. Fascist ideas and Europe's fascist leaders also appealed to some. Even Canadian Prime Minister Mackenzie King reacted positively to Adolf Hitler when he first met him. Out of these circumstances emerged a Canadian fascist party led by a Montreal journalist, Adrien Arcand who became a significant part of the political scene through most of the 1930s.

Arcand adopted Nazi symbols and eagerly voiced anti-Semitic views. He organized large successful rallies of his right-wing supporters under the sign of the swastika and enjoyed the support of a substantial and committed group of Canadians. Once Canada declared war on Germany and Italy, however, Arcand was imprisoned for his political views. Yet after the war he resumed his activities as leader of the far-right National Unity Party, and forged ties to Quebec's provincial government of Maurice Duplessis during the 1950s and 1960s. Although Canadian historians have paid little attention to Arcand, he played an important role in the country's political life for many years.

This fascinating biography sheds light on a man and an era that have been hidden in the shadows for too long.

"In exploring the forgotten life of Adrien Arcand, Jean-Francois Nadeau has written the first real historical work on Canada's best-known fascist." Le Devoir

 

Contents

ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
11
PROLOGUE
13
MOMENTUM
21
THE GOGLUS
41
FIRE AND ASHES
80
FASCIST AND JOURNALIST
99
THE PLANES FROM ORBETELLO
133
THE BLUESHIRTS
159
FASCIST UNION
205
PETAWAWA
227
THE OGRE OF LANORAIE
247
HOLOCAUST DENIER
283
EPILOGUE
310
ENDNOTES
316
INDEX
359
Copyright

A FRIEND NAMED CÉLINE
183

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2011)

JEAN-FRANCOIS NADEAU taught history at Laurentian University before becoming the arts editor of Le Devoir. He is the author of five books and currently lives in Montreal.