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Maxwell Yalden
April 4, 1930 - February 9, 2015
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<div itemprop="description">Max Yalden passed away on the morning of February 9, 2015 at the Ottawa Hospital. Deeply beloved husband for over 60 years of Janice Yalden. Loving father of Robert and the late Cicely Yalden. Devoted father-in-law and grandfather to Pearl Eliadis and Zo&euml; Yalden. <br />Max was born in Toronto on April 12, 1930. After receiving his BA from Victoria College, University of Toronto in 1952, he attended the University of Paris, and then completed graduate studies in philosophy at the University of Michigan, receiving his MA in 1954 and Ph.D. in l956. <br />Max was a devoted Canadian public servant. He joined the Department of External Affairs in 1956 and was posted to Moscow in 1958. In 1960 he served on the Canadian Delegation to the Geneva Conference on Disarmament and was with the Department&rsquo;s Disarmament Division in Ottawa until 1963. Max was then posted to the Canadian Embassy in Paris as first secretary and became counsellor in 1965. He returned to Ottawa in 1967 as special advisor to the Under-Secretary of State for External Affairs. From 1969 to 1973 Max served as Assistant Under-Secretary of State in the Department of the Secretary of State. He was then appointed Deputy Minister of Communications in May 1973 serving in that position until September 1977. In 1977 Max was appointed Commissioner of Official Languages, a position he held for seven years. He was profoundly committed to official bilingualism and was instrumental in advancing its acceptance across Canada. <br />In1984, he was appointed Canadian Ambassador to Belgium and Luxembourg. In 1987, Max was named Chief Commissioner of the Canadian Human Rights Commission, a position he held for a decade. He worked tirelessly for human rights in Canada, with notable accomplishments in a number of areas including the inclusion of sexual orientation as a prohibited ground of discrimination in the Canadian Human Rights Act and the advancement of Canadians&rsquo; understanding of discrimination facing our Aboriginal peoples. <br />In 1996 and 2000 Max was elected to the United Nations Human Rights Committee and served in that capacity for eight years. He was the author of Transforming Rights &ndash; Reflections from the Front Lines (University of Toronto Press, 2009) and a member of the Honorary Board of Equitas - International Centre for Human Rights Education. <br />Max was named a Companion of the Order of Canada and a Commandeur de l&rsquo;ordre de la Pl&eacute;aide. He also received honorary doctorates from the University of Ottawa and Carleton University. <br />A private burial was held and a memorial service will take place at a later date. Donations may be made to the Ottawa Hospital or the University of Ottawa Heart Institute. <br /> <br /> <br />Max Yalden est d&eacute;c&eacute;d&eacute; &agrave; l&rsquo;H&ocirc;pital d&rsquo;Ottawa le matin du 9 f&eacute;vrier 2015. Il laisse dans le deuil son &eacute;pouse Janice Yalden, avec qui il a partag&eacute; sa vie pendant plus que 60 ans, ainsi que son fils Robert, sa fille feu Cicely, sa belle-fille Pearl Eliadis et sa petite-fille Zo&euml; Yalden. <br />Max est n&eacute; &agrave; Toronto le 12 avril 1930. Bachelier &egrave;s arts du Victoria College de l&rsquo;universit&eacute; de Toronto en 1952, Max a poursuivi ses &eacute;tudes &agrave; l&rsquo;universit&eacute; de Paris et &agrave; l&rsquo;universit&eacute; du Michigan o&ugrave; il a obtenu une ma&icirc;trise &egrave;s arts en 1954 et un doctorat en philosophie en 1956. <br />Max fut un diplomate et fonctionnaire qui s&rsquo;est d&eacute;vou&eacute; au Canada. Il est entr&eacute; au minist&egrave;re des Affaires ext&eacute;rieures en 1956. Deux ans plus tard, il a &eacute;t&eacute; affect&eacute; &agrave; l&rsquo;ambassade du Canada, &agrave; Moscou. En 1960, il a fait partie de la d&eacute;l&eacute;gation canadienne &agrave; la Conf&eacute;rence de Gen&egrave;ve sur le d&eacute;sarmement et, au cours de trois ann&eacute;es qui ont suivi, il a travaill&eacute; &agrave; la direction du d&eacute;sarmement du Minist&egrave;re, &agrave; Ottawa. En l963, Max a &eacute;t&eacute; nomm&eacute; premier secr&eacute;taire &agrave; l&rsquo;ambassade du Canada &agrave; Paris, puis conseiller deux ans plus tard. Il est devenu, en l967, conseiller sp&eacute;cial aupr&egrave;s du sous-secr&eacute;taire d&rsquo;&Eacute;tat aux Affaires ext&eacute;rieures, &agrave; Ottawa. <br />De 1969 &agrave; l973, Max a &eacute;t&eacute; sous-secr&eacute;taire d&rsquo;&Eacute;tat adjoint, au Secr&eacute;tariat d&rsquo;&Eacute;tat du Canada. De l973 &agrave; 1997, il a occup&eacute; le poste de sous-ministre des Communications. En 1977, Max a &eacute;t&eacute; nomm&eacute; Commissiare aux langues officielles pour un mandat de sept ans. Il a jou&eacute; un r&ocirc;le important dans la promotion du bilinguisme officiel au Canada, une cause qui lui tenait &agrave; coeur. En 1984, il a &eacute;t&eacute; nomm&eacute; ambassadeur du Canada en Belgique et au Luxembourg. <br />En 1987, Max est devenu pr&eacute;sident de la Commission canadienne des droits de la personne. Il occupe ce poste pendant dix ans, ne cessant de travailler pour avancer les droits de la personne au Canada. Parmi ses r&eacute;ussites fut l&rsquo;inclusion d&rsquo;une prohibition contre la discrimination fond&eacute;e sur l&rsquo;orientation sexuelle dans la Loi canadienne sur les droits de la personne, ainsi qu&rsquo;une meilleure appr&eacute;ciation de la part des Canadiens des formes de discrimination auxquels nos peuples autochtones sont assujettis. <br />En 1996 et en 2000, M. Yalden a &eacute;t&eacute; &eacute;lu membre du Comit&eacute; des droits de l&rsquo;homme des Nations Unies; poste qu&rsquo;il a occup&eacute; pendant huit ans. Il fut l&rsquo;auteur de Transforming Rights &ndash; Reflections from the Front Lines (University of Toronto Press, 2009) et un membre du conseil honoraire d&rsquo;Equitas &ndash; Centre international d&rsquo;&eacute;ducation aux droits humains. <br />Max a &eacute;t&eacute; re&ccedil;u Compagnon de l&rsquo;Ordre du Canada et Commandeur de l&rsquo;Ordre de la Pl&eacute;iade. Il &eacute;tait &eacute;galement d&eacute;tenteur de doctorats honorifiques d&eacute;cern&eacute;s par l&rsquo;universit&eacute; d&rsquo;Ottawa et de Carleton University. <br />Une s&eacute;pulture priv&eacute;e a eu lieu et un service comm&eacute;moratif aura lieu plus tard. Pour ceux et celles qui le d&eacute;sirent, des dons peuvent &ecirc;tre vers&eacute;s &agrave; l&rsquo;H&ocirc;pital d&rsquo;Ottawa ou &agrave; l&rsquo;Institut de Cardiologie de l&rsquo;Universit&eacute; d&rsquo;Ottawa. <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /> <br /></div>