27 September 2011

What happens in Toronto, shouldn't stay in Toronto

Toronto, whose slogan is 'the good'
Edward Scicluna's visit to the Maltese community in Toronto reminded me of a key episode in my life in which he was a bit of a protagonist. 

As a radical left-wing student at the University of Toronto in the 1980s I had absolutely no interest in Maltese politics. Why bother about the little bit of violence on this little island when there was a global communist revoltion to plan? And obviously, the planning took place over sushi in the capitalist heartland.

Yet after a few visits to Malta I began to take more of an interest. Returning to Toronto I started watching the Community TV channel which alloted a weekly programme to ethnic communities, including the Maltese one. What I saw on the TV screen as the blizzards bashed on my student room window was not what I had observed in Malta. What was supposed to be the news was just a relay of the Socialist regime's propaganda spouting out of Pellegrini's Xandir Malta. 

There and then I decided to do something about it. I wrote to Louis Galea, who was then the PN's secretary general, and who I had never met. The first sentence read like this: "I am a marxist student and I share none of your party's principles. But I believe that people have a right to know the truth about Malta. If you think that I could do something to change what is being transmitted here ..." Politically, it was a turning point in my life.

Where does Edward Scicluna fit into all this? Simple. He was the one who used to appear on my battered student TV screen in Toronto in the 1980s. A fellow student at the University of Toronto, he spent his spare time feeding the Maltese community in Toronto that all was well back home. 

Thank you, Edward. You made me see the light in more ways than one.

4 comments:

JV said...

Ouch.

AA said...

As self-confessed radical Marxist, you are hardly in a position to throw stones at Edward Scicluna.

BTW, do you consider yourself a neo-conservative now?

Alfred Grech said...

I'm not too sure if I can understnd your reasoning or lack of it regarding the TV Community programs in Toronto in the 80's.

I used to participate in the program which Victor Formosa used to produce. We have NEVER mentioned politics in our program and the news was not that elaborate since then we had no access to the internet like we have today.

Lou, it looks like the only good programs are those which you organize. Cool it man before you'll be given a medal honoring you as a complainer.

Alfred Grech

BondiBlog said...

@ Alfred Grech - oh sorry, the long battle, all the meetings I had with the Community station officials to redress the imbalance were just an illusion.