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parsed(2022-05-05) - pubdate: 2022-05-05
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pub date: 1651726800
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What WE Lost

Inside the attack on Canada's Largest Children's Charity

May 5, 2022 | Trade paperback
ISBN: 9780888903150
$26.95
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Description

WE Charity had changed the game.

In its 25 years, the international development charity and youth empowerment movement impacted lives the world over. Innovation was at its core: while most charities focus on making the world a better place for our children, WE Charity focused on making better children for our world.

Founded by the ubiquitous Kielburger brothers, WE Charity operated more like a Silicon Valley start-up than a traditional NGO. From creating stadium-filling events with A-list celebrity ambassadors to building schools, infrastructure, a hospital and even a university at lightning speed, the organization was always full-throttle. Its for-profit partner, ME to WE, filled shelves with socially-conscious products that allowed consumers to track the impact of their spending, invited young people and families to visit and work in communities WE Charity supported and channelled proceeds back into the charity to make it self-sustaining.

Unique and disruptive, WE generated energy, engagement, and accolades. But it also bred misunderstanding and, in some quarters, resentment. With a long history of propelling youth to act in support of myriad causes--making "doing good doable," the slogan went--WE Charity was the ideal candidate to administer the Canada Student Services Grant (CSSG) program. The program, if it had happened, involved matching students within non-profits in a summer in which Covid had stolen most job opportunities.

And then, WE Charity in Canada was gone. It didn't crumble. It crashed.

Unwittingly caught in the crosshairs of a partisan fight that reflects the increasing "Americanization" of Canadian politics, WE Charity was forced to shutter its doors in Canada.

Once a media darling with politicians of all stripes clamouring to appear at its events, the charity was suddenly a pariah accused (falsely) of a litany of wrongdoings: political cronyism; governance failures; heavy-handed decision-making by executives; lining the pockets of the founders; manipulating children; mistreating donors; racism and international corruption. Many were shocked. Detractors were delighted. Led by fringe commentators, the media quickly piled on. Allies who spoke out were castigated and forced to take cover. But while most Canadians have heard of the so-called "WE Charity Scandal"--at times forming strong views--few are able to recount the true facts. Misperceptions and confusion have ruled the day. And many of the most important voices--including those of educators and young people--have gone unreported and unheard. In this book, former WE board member and lawyer Tawfiq Rangwala unpacks the evidence and provides the critical context around the headline-grabbing controversies that have shaped the narrative.

Drawing on the factual record, his personal experiences inside the organization, and extensive interviews with supporters and critics, Rangwala cuts through the fog and explains what really happened, why it happened, and who should be held to account. The world needs to have a balanced perspective on what this International charity has achieved while coming to terms with how the two founders handled the controversy in front of the cameras during testimony.

Along the way, we learn what has been lost and the personal cost to Canadians and people around the world.

More than just a story of the rise and fall of an iconic global charity, this is a cautionary tale of the collateral damage that can be levelled by unchecked partisan politics, social media pundits, and sensationalist headlines.

In the end, Canadians are left to ponder whether the real "scandal" is the demise of WE Charity and the values of fair play and due process that most of us hold dear.

About this Author

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.

ISBN: 9780888903150
Format: Trade paperback
Pages: 448
Publisher: Optimum Publishing International
Published: 2022-05-05

Reviews

Reading What WE Lost was an incredibly educational experience--it should be part of civics classes everywhere. While it was painful to absorb the stories of loss in each chapter and to come to terms with the societal costs that resulted from so much misinformation, thanks to Tawfiq Rangwala's extraordinary work, the truth is revealed."

What You Could Lose: Understanding Good Governance and Risk Management Governance As Leadership Leadership May 16, 2022 This is a tale of great achievement and great loss. A tale of innovation and jealousy. A tale of conflicts of interest, governance issues, and risk management. We do not recommend many books at Better Boards. Better Communities. But we do recommend to you What we lost: Inside the attack on Canada's largest children's charity by Tawfiq Rangwala. You can click on the title to order. Here is my ever so brief review: Through deep analysis and insightful reporting, Rangwala presents a thrilling if a disturbing review of the "WE Scandal", disgracing all parties concerned, but especially our politicians and media, looking for short-term clicks at the expense of thousands of young people. Shame indeed. But here are my lessons for all of us: -Be wary of single-source contracts, ensuring that it is indeed sole and that necessary policies and protocols have been followed in issuing them, if possible. -Be prepared for crisis communication, not just releasing positive stories to the press. -Collaborate and support related agencies to ensure broader impact and diffused support. -Anticipate risk. This story provides an object and abject lesson. -And most importantly, review your governance policies - conflict of interest, governance vs. operations, board members as agency volunteers, boards, and their foundations. You get the idea. Regardless of your size, location or focus, this title and story warrants your attention. Better Boards, Better Boards Better Communities, CEO, 17/05/2022

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/

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