Malcolm Ross (anti-Semite)
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Malcolm Ross (born 1946) is a former schoolteacher from the Canadian city of Moncton, who became notable for his anti-Semitic writings, including Holocaust denial.
In 1991, a local Jewish parent, David Attis, filed a human rights complaint against Ross's employers, New Brunswick School District 15, on the grounds that Ross's continued employment created a poisoned environment for Jewish students (including Attis's daughter, who - although not a student at Magnetic Hill School where Ross taught - had been intimidated out of attending interscholastic activities at Magnetic Hill).
After a lengthy hearing, during which Ross was represented by Doug Christie, the human rights commission ordered the District to remove Ross from the classroom, and to terminate his employment unless Ross's school could find a non-teaching position for him (and in fact, he was made the school librarian). In addition, the District warned Ross that, if he continued to publish or distribute anti-Semitic literature, his non-teaching position would be terminated as well. Attis was not awarded any damages.
The New Brunswick Court of Appeals subsequently ruled that these decisions were in violation of Ross's rights to freedom of religion and freedom of expression, and overturned the District's orders.
However, in 1996, the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that Ross's removal from the classroom was justifiable, on the grounds that, although it did constitute a violation of his freedoms, this was a reasonable limit, as schoolteachers must be held to a higher standard of behaviour.
The Court further ruled that the District's "gag order" (that Ross be dismissed from his non-teaching position should he continue to publish and distribute anti-Semitic material) was invalid.
In 1998, Ross filed a defamation lawsuit against Josh Beutel, an editorial cartoonist for the Telegraph-Journal, who had compared Ross to Joseph Goebbels; the New Brunswick Court of Queen's Bench ruled that, as Nazism was an anti-religious philosophy, and Ross was profoundly religious, Ross's extreme degree of anti-Semitism could not fairly be labeled as Nazistic. Beutel was ordered to pay Ross $7500 in damages; a 2000 appeal overturned this decision.