Edmonton
Journal | Edmonton, Alberta, March 30, 2004
Letter
to Editor Turning a blind
eye to war criminals V. G. WOOD ("Weary of campaign
to avenge Holocaust," Letters, March 24, 2004)
needs to be reminded that ensuring mass murderers
do not go unpunished is not an issue of revenge, it
is one of justice, the hallmark of any civilized
society. David
Irving comments: IS there not something,
oh, so sweet, about the unwitting irony in
this reader's letter, written by a
Holocaust Industrialist to a Canadian
newspaper in 2004? The writer is
Shoshana Szlachter, regional
director of the Edmonton-based Western
Canada B'nai
Brith. Here she is, insisting that the
Holocaust must be remembered by bringing
to trial every single one of its long-ago
perpetrators. Can't take much issue with
that. But in passing, Ms
Szlachter also insisted -- hypocritically
as it turns out (quoi de neuf) -- that any
and all crimes be sternly punished, and
that their perpetrators need to "hear that
message." Thus she demonstrated
neither interest in, nor patience for, an
earlier correspondent's appeal to
Christian mercy and forgiveness. On the
contrary, "time should not erase guilt,"
she argued, and criminals should bear the
stigma of their crimes, presumably,
forever and a day. Well, the world has
turned on its axis for eleven more months,
and now she has been found out. What irony
that this criminal should have shamelessly
used the Jewish Holocaust, the suffering
of others, to mitigate, excuse and explain
her own history of thievery.
Feb 25, 2005: Fraudster
Shoshana Szlachter (Western Canada
head of the B'nai Brith). stole from
Edmonton charity, claims in mitigation she
was depressed because her parents were
Holocaust
survivors
(depressed
-- because her parents
survived?) | Wood mentions feeling "battered and bruised" by
B'nai Brith's "continuous condemnations" about a
"terrible event that none of us are able to
change." It would, indeed, be much more comfortable
to forget the unpleasant details of history, but
let's not dress this up as being a contribution
towards teaching "faith, hope, charity, forgiveness
and love."If we are going to talk about "faith," how about
keeping faith with the victims by never forgetting
them? How can we ensure a world in which hope,
charity, forgiveness and love prevail unless we
demonstrate that we will not turn a blind eye to
criminality simply because this is the most
palatable route? Surely modern-day war criminals
and potential perpetrators of any crime need to
hear that message? For V. G. Wood, this is merely an unpleasant
"era of history," but to Holocaust survivors and
their families this is a much more personal and
painful reality. I grew up without grandparents,
aunts, uncles, cousins and an older brother because
of Nazi war crimes. And surely, this is not just an
issue for the Jewish community. We need to remember
that the Nazis targeted not just Jews, but also the
intellectually and physically handicapped, gays,
Gypsies, Communists and anyone else who did not fit
their description of the perfect Aryan nation. There is an expression that "time heals all,"
but time should not erase guilt. Let the world bring to justice those who
perpetrated crimes against humanity not only in
Nazi Germany, but such places as Cambodia, Bosnia
and Rwanda, and let's not advocate merely
consigning them to history. Shoshana Szlachter, Western regional director of B'nai
Brith, Edmonton, Canada --- The
Edmonton SunFebruary 25, 2005 Excuses don't
cut it Tony Blais, COURT BUREAU A PROMINENT Jewish spokesman
[sic] who defrauded an Edmonton non-profit
organization says she was depressed because her
parents were Holocaust survivors. Shoshana Szlachter, the western regional
director of the Edmonton-based Jewish human rights
group B'Nai Brith, yesterday pleaded guilty to one
count of fraud over $5,000. Court heard she defrauded the Alberta Underwater
Council of nearly $8,000 between Jan. 1, 1999, and
Oct. 31, 2002, while she was working as their
executive director. Provincial court Judge David Tilley gave
Szlachter, 54, a suspended
sentence and placed her on 12 months of
probation. If she breaches the probation, she
could be jailed. Defence lawyer Simon Renouf said
Szlachter was "under a great deal of emotional and
financial pressure" at the time because
child-support payments coming from her former
husband were reduced because he had a stroke.
Renouf also cited a written report from Szlachter's
psychologist in which it says she suffered
depression as a result of her parents being
survivors of the Holocaust. That doesn't sit well with Tom Davies, the
president of the Alberta Underwater Council, the
governing body for underwater sporting activities
in Alberta. "That's pretty hard to eat for me,"
said Davies yesterday. "That to me is a real
cop-out," he said. "I find it hard to believe that
she would blame her crime on being the child of
Holocaust survivors." Davies said the theft caused the volunteer
organization a lot of hardship, including making
them unable to fund the 2002 underwater hockey
world championship in Calgary. The council has also launched a civil lawsuit
against Szlachter, alleging
she actually stole closer to
$40,000, and seeking the balance between
that number and the $7,927.43 she repaid in court
yesterday. Crown prosecutor Joan Blaine told court
Szlachter's duties with the council included
running the office, paying bills and keeping track
of gaming accounts. In October 2002, she was let go
due to "poor work performance," and a review of the
books revealed she had been writing herself extra
cheques for unauthorized items. The cheques were made out to cash and the money
went into her personal bank account, said Blaine.
As well, Szlachter made numerous long-distance
calls on the office phone, bought furniture from
Office Depot which she used in her home, and billed
the council for a water cooler in her home as well
as delivered water. During her 12-month probation, Szlachter was
ordered to perform 50 hours of community service
and continue taking counselling and treatment with
her psychologist. Szlachter's B'Nai Brith office is
in the building owned by the Jewish Community
Centre of Edmonton. However, nobody with the Jewish
Federation wished to comment. A spokesman with the
B'Nai Brith's Canadian head office in Toronto was
unavailable yesterday. |