Pubdate: Wed, 08 Dec 1999 Source: Tab, The (CN BC) Copyright: 1999 Ardee Publications Ltd. Contact: 1277 Cedar Ave., Trail, B.C., Canada V1R 4B9 Fax: (250) 368-6005 Author: Murray Greig The Champ Wants to Visit West Kootenay The greatest fighter Canada ever produced is on the horn from Toronto, anxious to tell me about his recent sojourn to one of the remotest - and poorest - regions of Newfoundland. "I couldn't believe the response," George Chuvalo says with a trace of genuine wonder in his voice. "I spoke to a large group of parents and kids who have enough trouble just getting through the day-to-day stuff. Like almost everywhere else today, a lot of those kids are already experimenting with drugs and messing themselves up..but they were coming up to me afterwards and saying I'd given them something to think about, something that hopefully might change their lives..." Chuvalo isn't just a boxer, He's a fighter with a capital F. He held the Canadian heavyweight title for more than 20 years and is the only Top 10 world-ranked heavyweight in history who was never knocked down. He knocked out 71 of his 97 opponents and traded punches with some of the sport's all-time greats - including Muhammad Ali (twice), Joe Frazier and George Foreman. Since hanging up his gloves in 1979 he's appeared in more than a dozen movies (The Fly, Prom Night III, The Return of Elliot Ness), was inducted into the Order of Canada. But it's the fight Chuvalo has carried on outside the ring that's made him a true champion for Canada's youth. In February 1985, Chuvalo's son Jesse committed suicide to free himself from heroin addiction. Two years later, sons Steven and George Lee were sent to prison for a drugstore robbery. In October 1993, less than a week after being released from prison, George Lee was found dead from a drug overdose in a Toronto hotel room. Four days later, a disconsolate Lynne Chuvalo, George's wife of 33 years, took her own life. Three years after Lynne's death, Steven Chuvalo fatally overdosed on heroin. Through it all, the man who was beaten but never defeated has managed to hold together his remaining family - a daughter, a son, daughters-in-law, grandchildren. The same stoic resilience and strength of will that served Chuvalo so well between the ropes has been channeled into a foundation: Fight Against Drugs, Inc. On behalf of the organization he founded, George crisscrosses Canada several times each year, speaking to students, youth organizations and service clubs. He talks the way he fought: plain, unadorned...and with devastating power. "It's the toughest fight of my life, relating what happened to my family because of drugs," he says quietly. "I don't mince words..I tell it like it is. I've seen it up close, I've seen what happens, so I'm able to take away the sense of glamor or thrills some kids attach to drugs. I don't preach, I just tell my story and let the kids ask questions. It's not pretty, but I know when I'm getting through to 'em. Over the past two years Chuvalo has travelled tens of thousands of miles for Fight Against Drugs, Inc. In the last six weeks alone, he's been to Newfoundland, Alberta, Saskatchewan, Manitoba and the Okanagan--and he says he'd love to bring his message to the West Kootenay. "If I reach just one kid every time I speak, it doesn't matter how far I travelled to get there," he says. "If I can spare one family going through the hell my family has gone through, it's all worthwhile." For more information on Fight Against Drugs, Inc. or on sponsoring Chuvalo for a talk, visit his website at http://www.georgechuvalo.com, fax to 416-748-7727 or e-mail to --- MAP posted-by: allan wilkinson