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Doug Collins: A
biographical sketch
By Orest Slepokura
Doug Collins was born
81 years ago in the United Kingdom.
In 1939, with the outbreak of the Second
World War, he volunteered for the British Army
and, while serving as an infantry sergeant (at
19, the youngest in his regiment), was captured
by the Germans at Dunkirk in 1940.
As a POW in both German and Hungarian
prisoner of war camps, Collins staged as many as
10 separate attempts to escape captivity. Upon
his release from Rumania in 1944, he again
fought with the British forces in Europe until
the end of the war.

Doug Collins
Between 1946 and 1950, Collins served as a
political intelligence officer with the British
Control Commission's de-Nazification program in
Germany.
In 1952, he emigrated to Canada.
Doug Collins' career in journalism has
included work in print and electronic media,
both as a reporter and commentator. He has
worked at several of the big Canadian dailies,
including the Calgary Herald, the
Vancouver Province and the
Vancouver Sun. For a time, he hosted an
open-line radio talk show, and also worked for
CBC Television.
Between 1983 and 1997, Collins wrote a
popular and controversial column for the
North Shore News (North Vancouver, BC).
On November 12, 1997, a complaint brought
before the British Columbia Human Rights
Commission by the Canadian Jewish Congress for
comments made in a column Doug Collins wrote
about the Spielberg film "Schindler's List"
entitled "Hollywood Propaganda" (March 9, 1994,
North Shore News) was dismissed.
A follow-up complaint to the B.C. Human
Rights Commission by Harry Abrams of Victoria,
with the support of B'Nai Brith Canada, that
included for orginal News column plus three
others, was upheld and was currently being
appealled.
Doug Collins is the author of several books,
including his wartime memoir, POW: A
Soldier's Story of His Ten Escapes from Nazi
Prison Camps (New York: W.W. Norton,
1968), Immigration: Parliament versus the
People (1986), The Best and Worst
of Doug Collins (1988), and Here We
Go Again (1998).
Doug Collins' work in journalism has been
honoured with Canada's National Newspaper Award
(1953) and the MacMillan Bloedel Award (1975).
On January 20, 1993, he was awarded the
Commemorative Medal for the 125th Anniversary of
Canada's Confederation. The medal honours
Canadians "who have made a significant
contribution to their fellow citizens, their
community or to Canada."
We leave the last word to Doug Collins: "I
will conclude by saying that ... I defended
freedom in the 1940s when Hitler was on the
loose, in the 1970s when the federal hate laws
were passed, and in the 1990s when those idiots
in Victoria passed their misnamed Human Rights
Act, and that I shall go on defending freedom
until the day I die." |