Protestor gone but his
fight will continue
By Paul Schratz
Interim special
The one time I met Maurice
Lewis, I recall thinking: "This is the guy?" Lewis was one of the meekest,
least intimidating fellows
you'd ever care to meet.
Reporters who interviewed him came away startled at his mild manner. Not
the sort of person you'd
peg as the government's
Public Enemy No. 1.
Yet that's what Lewis was,
as the government in 1995 launched a full legal assault against the Vancouver
truck driver for daring
to cross the 50-metre no-go
zone around the Everywoman's Health Centre in east Vancouver while carrying
a pro-life message.
Today, Lewis is dead, and
details remain sketchy. On September 5, the same day Mother Teresa died,
Lewis was found dead
in his truck in northern
Ontario. Police at first chalked it up to natural causes. Now they're asking
people who knew him if he
had been receiving threats
from anyone. As of September 10, provincial police were also refusing to
release his autopsy report.
Gentle by nature
If Lewis died violently,
it contrasts sadly with his nature. Although rugged looking, he was refined,
with a British accent - the
type you'd expect to startle
with a soft "Boo!" Yet the former bus driver was dragged through the courts
so the NDP could
maintain a fiction that
he was a risk.
Lewis was first charged with
breach of the access zone in September 1995. He refused to co-operate by
giving police his
name, so they added obstructing
a police officer to the charges. He refused to sign an undertaking to stay
away from the centre,
and was held three months
in custody until his court date.
When he finally went to trial
in 1996, Judge E. J. Cronin ruled that although so-called "sidewalk counselling"
could be
prohibited, it was unconstitutional
to restrict Lewis's freedom of association, religion and speech, i.e. praying
in public. The
government appealed, and
later in the year B.C. Supreme Court Justice Mary Saunders threw out Cronin's
ruling and convicted
Lewis, saying a woman's
right to an abortion outweighs the right to freedom of expression under
the Charter.
Legal limbo
Lewis's lawyer, Paul Formby,
filed a notice of appeal. Now with Lewis's death, a sort of legal limbo
has resulted, as Formby
and the Crown try to figure
out their options while another pro-lifer, Jim Demers, awaits trial on
similar charges to Lewis's.
Formby says the attorney-general
could invite submissions on the particular issues in dispute, perhaps for
the date of Lewis's
scheduled appeal next February.
Sounding drained, Formby talks about Lewis as though he was more than a
client - and he
was. "I felt like he was
a brother." When Lewis refused to stay away from the clinic, remained in
jail, and lost his truck-driving
job, "I really admired him
for that," he said.
For Lewis, death came just
as romance seemed to be blossoming. On a visit to his native England this
summer, he met someone
- a girlfriend who planned
to come visit him. People who knew Lewis say he had high regard for women.
Personal stake
And while his critics would
say he interfered with women's rights whenever he persuaded them to walk
away from an abortion
clinic, Lewis would tell
you otherwise. Lewis had a personal stake in the issue of abortion, because
years earlier, in England,
when a friend's girlfriend
had become pregnant, it was Lewis who had helped her get an abortion, paying
for it himself.
The turmoil he witnessed
in her life afterward turned him around forever. "He had this compassion
for women, because he saw
first-hand the suffering,"
says Formby. Compassion was in his nature to the end. Formby says that
on the Friday before he died,
Lewis was driving in California.
Eating in a restaurant near L.A., he witnessed a woman being terrorized
by her angry, and big,
companion. Lewis, no giant,
went over and confronted the man, who stood up, towering over Lewis, zipped
open a satchel and
reached inside. At that
moment Lewis thought he was going to die. He said a quick prayer and prepared
for the worst.
Suddenly the man closed
the bag and walked out the door.
"He really believed in standing
up for what he believed in," said Formby."He's one man I really admired."
(Paul Schratz is an editorial
writer with The Vancouver Province. This article is reprinted with permission
of the newspaper).
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