Tom Mulcair staged a high school sit-in... to bring back recess
John Mac Master met NDP Leader Tom Mulcair when they were 14 years old and attending junior high school in Laval, Que. The two became fast friends, but there was one particular moment that sealed their bond.
Their school wanted to get rid of a recess.
"We were in high dudgeon about this. The way only adolescent males can get," said Mac Master.
Indignant, the two teenage boys decided they had to take action. So they organized a protest.
I don't know how it came to happen, but we organized a sit-in. We marched out of class, went down to a common area and sat on the floor and refused to go back to class until they gave us back our recess.- John Mac Master
Their act of civil disobedience lasted approximately one hour. The teachers, impressed by Mulcair and Mac Master's teenaged revolt, caved. Recess was restored.
"I went in to union negotiation later in life and I think that was one of the reasons why," laughed Mac Master.
Cox spent years tending to the spiritual lives of Catholic high school students, but Mac Master said he didn't pull any punches.
"He was in our face," recalled Mac Master, who said Father Cox would ask questions like: "What are you here for? What's the meaning of your life? Are you just here to get a girl in to bed [..] or does your life have more meaning than that?'"
"Father Cox treated him almost like a son," said Mac Master. "He became quite a mentor to him all the way through his life."
DNTO's episode about the personal stories behind our party leaders airs Saturday, September 26th at 3 p.m. on CBC Radio One.