The October Crisis, 1970
An Insider's View
- Publisher
- McGill-Queen's University Press
- Initial publish date
- Oct 2010
- Category
- General, General, Civil Rights
-
Paperback / softback
- ISBN
- 9780773538016
- Publish Date
- Oct 2010
- List Price
- $34.95
-
Hardback
- ISBN
- 9780773531185
- Publish Date
- Oct 2006
- List Price
- $59.95
Classroom Resources
Where to buy it
Description
In October 1970, Robert Bourassa's provincial government refused to exchange political hostages for twenty-three FLQ terrorists. By the evening of 15 October, 3,000 outraged Quebecers appeared poised to riot. Fearing insurrection, the federal government implemented the War Measures Act and jailed 497 people. Most Canadian historians cite this event as an unjustified assault on civil rights and political liberty - The October Crisis, 1970 challenges this assumption. William Tetley, then a minister in Bourassa's cabinet, breaks the government's silence about the event and, with meticulous reference to now available documentation and passages from his own 1970 diary, reveals details of the government's decision-making process. He also points out facts that most historical interpretations gloss over: for instance, all but sixty of those apprehended were soon released, not a window was broken, and the calm that descended on Quebec and Canada has lasted for four decades.
About the author
William Tetley, now professor of international law, McGill University, was serving as a minister in Robert Bourassa’s cabinet when the October Crisis broke out.
Editorial Reviews
"...[an] enlightening and bracing look back at Canada's terrorist crisis...nearly 40 years ago." The Gazette
"Tetley addresses important questions, corrects widely believed factual errors, and successfully deconstructs events from a side of the conflict seldom written about by popular historians." Canada's History
"William Tetley has written a valuable account of this bizarre chapter in our history. He has drawn on new documentary sources, journalistic reports, and his own political conversations and diaries. Tetley's is the most complete record we have of this turbulent period, and it is meticulously researched, artfully written, and thoroughly polemical." University of Toronto Quarterly