
New Heritage Minute celebrates Bora Laskin, namesake of Thunder Bay, Ont., law school
CBC
Michel Beaulieu says Historica Canada's new Heritage Minute featuring Bora Laskin is "long overdue."
Born in 1912 in Fort William — now Thunder Bay, Ont., — Laskin is known for overcoming antisemitism to become the first Jewish Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada.
"He became an academic and a leading scholar in many of the types of issues that would resonate today, and definitely the types of focus that became our law school," said Beaulieu, associate vice-provost of academic and professor of history at Lakehead University.
The namesake of Lakehead's Bora Laskin Faculty of Law is known for his forward-thinking approach to law and focus on human rights. Appointed to the Supreme Court by former Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau, his work informed much of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms, said Beaulieu.
"It's always nice when you see an important element of our region's past receiving national attention," Beaulieu said.
The law school first opened in 2013 and was renamed after Laskin the following year.
"It was a natural choice to approach the [Laskin] family for a law school that was established to be innovative, to have a focus that dealt with Indigenous law, resource law, small practice, rural, the types of things and innovation that Laskin himself was known for," Beaulieu said.
"All of these things do resonate in our law school, the nature of how we approach law, the program, the innovation that our faculty bring to it, but also the nature of the students we have in our program."
After graduating from the Fort William Collegiate and Technical Institute, Laskin was accepted into the second year of the honour law undergraduate program at the University of Toronto when he was only 17.
He received his BA and MA from there before going on to obtain his law degree from Osgoode Hall and a graduate degree in law from Harvard University.
But it wasn't easy. Laskin's family first arrived in Fort William as Russian Jewish immigrants who had faced significant persecution back home. He contended with similar antisemitic attitudes when trying to find a job in Toronto.
Eventually, he secured teaching positions at both of his alma maters in Toronto before being appointed to the Ontario Court of Appeal and later the Supreme Court of Canada.
"He is one of the most in-exhaustingly compelling figures of Canadian law," said Kerry Rittich, professor of law, women and gender studies and public policy and governance at the University of Toronto, in a news release issued Wednesday.
In the Supreme Court, "what he stood out wasn't just the majority decisions, it was also the dissenting comments," Beaulieu said.













