Thank you very much, Mr. Chair.
Mr. Rabinovitch, thank you for being here.
I'm going to narrow this down a bit and talk about an incident I feel certainly does not conform with your stated mandate. Let me start off by giving you a hypothetical.
Let's assume for a moment there was a movie made. The movie claimed to be in the year 2006 and was a movie about the CBC. In this movie there was a character who portrayed the role of the president of the CBC, and this character's stage name in the movie was Robert Rabinovitch. This character was portrayed in the movie to be a member of the Ku Klux Klan, and clearly, sir, you are not. This character also was portrayed in the movie to be an alcoholic, and I can only assume, sir, that you are not. Also, this character in the movie, let's assume hypothetically, was portrayed to be a corrupt individual and someone who was engaged in many illegal activities. I can only assume, Mr. Rabinovitch, that if this movie aired you would be very much offended by the characterization and the tarnishing of your reputation, particularly since many people in this hypothetical situation consider this movie to be factual.
Obviously, sir, I'm not going to get you to comment on a hypothetical, but as you well know, there was an instance that was very similar to this and it was not hypothetical, it was real. It was a movie that played on CBC called Prairie Giant: The Tommy Douglas Story. In that movie the character of the Honourable James Gardiner, a former Liberal Premier of Saskatchewan, a former Liberal cabinet minister, and in fact I think the longest-serving Minister of Agriculture in the history of Canada's Parliament, was portrayed in exactly the light that I have given in the hypothetical.
I never had the privilege of meeting Mr. Gardiner, but by all accounts he was a very highly principled man and very moral man, a man who stood up against the Ku Klux Klan in Saskatchewan in the 1930s, when it was not popular to do so. He was a man who was not an alcoholic; in fact he was a teetotaler. This was a man who was mischaracterized so severely in this movie that it's moved his family on many occasions to communicate, or at least try to, with your organization to get this situation rectified.
My question, Mr. Rabinovitch, is how does this movie, which clearly misrepresents the reputation of a great Canadian, enlighten Canadians, particularly school children? At this point in time there are over 10,000 copies of the DVD of Prairie Giant: The Tommy Douglas Story in the hands of Canadians through libraries and schools.
I know there have been some attempts by CBC to rectify the situation. To your credit, you decided to pull a rebroadcast of this movie in June, but there's been precious little done, in my view, beyond that. There has been no effective disclaimer put on. I do not know whether CBC ever plans to rebroadcast this. There certainly hasn't been a disclaimer that meets the approval of the Gardiner family.
I am concerned, sir, that as a national public broadcaster, receiving public money, you would air a movie like this that seriously besmirches the character of someone who was not on the same side as I politically, but was someone who represented our province and country very well. Frankly, sir, I think it was disgrace. I was appalled when I saw the movie. I should say my son appeared in that movie as an actor, so I had a great interest in the movie, but when I saw the characterization of Mr. Gardiner, I had no qualms about standing up to what I believe was an intolerable act from a national broadcaster.
I ask you, sir, again, how does the airing of that movie help enlighten Canadians, particularly school children?