What WE Lost: Inside the attack on Canada's largest children's charity

Tawfiq S. Rangwala
Foreword by Kim Campbell
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What WE Lost: Inside the attack on Canada's largest children's charity

Tawfiq S. Rangwala
Foreword by Kim Campbell
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Found in: History & Political Science, Canadian History

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Overview

CANADIAN448 PAGESENGLISH

Promotional Details
  • Published date: May 05, 2022
  • Language: English
  • No. of Pages: 448
  • Publisher: Optimum Publishing International
  • ISBN: 9780888903150
  • Dimensions: 6.0" W x 0.75" L x 9.0" H

Mr. Rangwala was born and grew up in Toronto, Canada. He completed his undergraduate degree at McGill University, Montreal in 1999, and earned his J.D. from Osgoode Hall Law School in May 2002. He moved to New York to start his career at Milbank, LLP, where he is currently a partner in the firm''s Litigation and Arbitration Group. Mr. Rangwala specializes in representing companies and individuals facing investigations by government authorities, in conducting sensitive internal investigations across various industries, and litigating and arbitrating a wide range of commercial disputes. Mr. Rangwala frequently speaks and writes about white-collar defence and government investigations, securities litigation, international arbitration and emerging issues relating to cybersecurity and technology disputes. In law school, he served as the managing editor of the Osgoode Hall Law Journal.

Mr. Rangwala also devotes a significant portion of his practice to pro bono matters addressing systemic discrimination and injustices in criminal cases. These efforts, among others, resulted in Mr. Rangwala being awarded Chambers & Partners'' Pro Bono Lawyer of the Year in 2021.

Mark Bourrie


Tawfiq Rangwala has written a well-researched, solid account of the destruction of the WE movement in Canada. It’s remarkably clearly written. Rangwala is a lawyer who could have gone too deeply into the weeds of corporate and legal jargon, but What WE Lost is compelling and very readable. People should read this book. It is the only complete analysis of what happened to WE and its founders. Some of it is heartbreaking: the vicious online threats, the creepy stalking of the Kielburger brothers and their young families, especially after Brian Lilley published the home address of one of them in the Toronto Sun, and, always looming, the ruin of the life’s work of two Canadian heroes.


One was a sort of child star who had grown up sane, healthy and still enthusiastic, the other a Rhodes Scholar who could have made a lot of money on Bay Street but decided instead to develop sustaining fundraising systems for charities. Craig Kielburger was the idealist. Marc was the brother who tried to ensure the fruits of that idealism had sustainable funding, not from donations pried from people through TV ads or by fundraisers on street corners, but from ethical businesses that turned a profit. Canadian media insisted WE’s structure – a for-profit side feeding money to a charity – was somehow strange and sleazy, when the most basic research would have shown it wasn’t. The Salvation Army’s stores – a retail outlet that is likely familiar to Canadaland’s underpaid employees – raises money for the Salvation Army’s work with the homeless, prisoners, addicts and others in need.


Journalists were so incurious on the WE story that they missed the fact that it was a media issue that generated this law.

For more of the review click here

https://fairpress.ca/what-we-lost-a-review/

– Mark Bourrie, Author

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