Pubdate: Thu, 22 Feb 2007 Source: Etobicoke Guardian (CN ON) Copyright: 2007 Etobicoke Guardian Contact: http://www.insidetoronto.ca/to/etobicoke/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2218 Author: Cynthia Reason Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/heroin.htm (Heroin) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/people/george+chuvalo CHUVALO OR BUST Highs And Lows Of Boxing Legend's Life Found In Sculpture: Artist Much like the life of the man it so intricately depicts, Gabrielle Fischer Horvath's bronze bust of legendary Canadian boxer George Chuvalo is a mix of history, tragedy and artistry. "His life is in the sculpture," Fischer Horvath said at the bust's unveiling Monday at Bloor Street Boxing and Fitness. "His strength is re-created in it, but it also symbolizes his tragic life; torn in pieces and in shards." In his 93 professional fights between 1956 and 1979, Chuvalo never once touched the canvas, and spent 21 of his 23 years as a professional boxer as the reigning Canadian heavyweight champion. But the mettle of the fighter Muhammad Ali once described as "the toughest man I ever fought," was put to its most difficult test only after Chuvalo retired from the ring. In what he has described as his own personal holocaust, Chuvalo has lost three of his five children and his first wife to drugs. His grim family history, he said, is what set in motion his crusade to make young people aware of the pitfalls of drugs by offering up his sons as an example. "I don't sugar-coat anything for them," Chuvalo said of his Fight Against Drugs speaking tour of high schools across the country. "I talk to them about my sons (physical reaction) at the very sight of heroin when in the throes of needing the drug so badly." First there was his son Jesse, who became addicted to heroin in 1984 and was found dead of a self-inflicted gunshot a year later. He was 20. Next came Georgie Lee, who, after a long battle with heroin and an extended stint in jail for robbing a drugstore, died of a heroin overdose four weeks after being released from prison in 1993. He was 30. Wife Lynn was found dead of a prescription drug overdose two days after his funeral. Then came Steven, 35, who has become a kind of centrepiece around Chuvalo's anti-drug presentations. "At the beginning of the talks I show a video and in it the kids see Steven - and it looks like he's going to make it. He's a nice looking boy, a very likeable guy and you believe what he says when he says he's going to beat drugs," Chuvalo said. "Then the video ends and I tell the kids Steven, too, died of a heroin overdose. You can hear an audible gasp from the kids every time." It's the shock of that reaction, Chuvalo said, that acts as a kind of "preventative medicine" for kids who are most at risk. "I never would have thought I would be doing this," he said, "but with my family, I do it because I have to do it." Chuvalo's tenacity both in and out of the ring is what made him an attractive model for sculpting, Fischer Horvath said. "Like him, bronze is lasting. Boxers don't stop till they drop down," she said, "but George is still going on strong and hasn't given up despite the blows he's taken." Fischer Horvath is currently trying to find an organization to either auction off Chuvalo's bronze bust to raise funds for his Fight Against Drugs organization, or one interested in purchasing Chuvalo's likeness to use as a commemorative piece in a public location. For more information, visit http://www.ghbronze.com. For more information on Chuvalo's Fight Against Drugs, call 416-748-7737 or go to http://www.fightagainstdrugs.ca. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin