Quick facts about former politician, social activist Stephen Lewis
OTTAWA — Former politician and longtime Canadian social activist Stephen Lewis has died. Here are some quick facts about Canada’s former ambassador to the United Nations and one-time leader of the NDP in Ontario.
Early life: Lewis was born in Ottawa on Nov. 11, 1937 to Sophie (née Carson) and David Lewis, who was national secretary of the Co-operative Commonwealth Federation, forerunner of the NDP and later that party’s federal leader. Lewis’s grandfather Moishe Lewis was an activist in the Jewish Labour Committee in Montreal. Growing up the eldest of four children in a family steeped in politics and social activism, Lewis learned early on to hone his oratory.
Education: In 1956, he entered the University of Toronto, where he joined the Hart House debating team. Lewis switched to the University of British Columbia in third year, then returned to U of T for his final year, but didn’t write his final examinations. He went to law school twice in the early 1960s but dropped out both times. After university, he travelled to Africa, where he taught English and fell in love with the continent.
Personal life: In 1963, he married journalist and social activist Michele Landsberg. The Toronto couple had three children, Ilana Landsberg-Lewis, Jenny Leah Lewis and Avi Lewis, who is married to writer Naomi Klein. Avi Lewis was elected leader of the federal NDP on Sunday. During his acceptance speech in Winnipeg on Sunday, Lewis acknowledged his father was “not doing too well” but was hanging on to see the next chapter of “the movement” and remained passionate “about the promise of democratic socialism.”


