Honouring the needs of Indigenous communities
The Steven Low Foundation aims to bring healing and hope through a gift to the National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation.
The Steven Low Foundation aims to bring healing and hope through a gift to the National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation.
Steven Low was born to a Jewish family in Poland in 1932. During World War Two, his mother hid him in a monastery, which saved his life but didn’t shield him from horrors of the Holocaust. After the war, he was reunited with his mother, and they came to Canada.
While attending McGill University on a chess scholarship, he joined Gairdner & Company as a Security Analyst. Within a year he was recruited by American mining entrepreneur Joseph Hirshhorn, joining the team that discovered “The Big Z”. A man of great vision and bold ideas, he ventured around the globe, from investing in copper mining in South America to brokering oil deals in the Middle East. Always ahead of the curve and ready to embrace new trends, he was a leading figure in bringing pharma, electronics and telecom to post-Soviet Russia. He had a gift of seeing opportunities and solutions to problems and the courage to take them.
Her father’s hope for the Foundation that would bear his name was also to help find the beloved remains of residential school children, bringing some closure to those suffering from generational trauma. To help make that hope a reality, the Foundation recently made a gift to the National Centre for Truth and Reconciliation (NCTR).
In a letter accompanying the gift, Steven wrote: “As a Holocaust survivor, I know firsthand what it is like to be robbed of one’s identity, heritage, and future. I survived. I lived. I was granted a life, coming to Canada as a refugee. I was given hope by a nation, only to learn the appalling truth of its past. To do nothing is not an option. It is in all of us to step forward, be mindful leaders, and treat each other with dignity and respect. It is up to all of us to right an unconscionable wrong in any and every way we can. It is my personal wish that The Steven Low Foundation bring healing and hope to those who have suffered too much and for too long."
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