EBOOK

Pearson's Prize

John Melady
(0)
Pages
200
Year
2006
Language
English

About

In the fall of 1956,the world was on the brink of war. Egyptian President Gamel Nasser nationalized the Suez Canal, and Britain, France, and Israel attacked him. Russia supported Nasser, and Soviet Premier Khrushchev threatened nuclear holocaust if the United States became militarily involved. Soon, the matter became a major problem for the United Nations. Fortunately, because of the efforts of Lester Pearson, then Canada's Minister of External Affairs, the crisis was defused. Pearson proposed a U. N. peacekeeping force be sent to Egypt to separate the warring factions there and keep the peace. Because his idea was adopted, Pearson helped save the world from war. For his outstanding statesmanship, Pearson won the Nobel Prize for Peace, the only Canadian ever to do so. This book, written to commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of the event, is about the Suez and about Pearson's work during a tension-filled time in the twentieth century.

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Reviews

"... this short book comes highly recommended as an overview to one of the most important events in Canadian diplomatic history."
Winnipeg Free Press
"Melady's book is a gift worth reading for anyone. It offers something for everyone ... It is well worth reading and well worth your time."
The Lethbridge Herald
"Melady's book moves with an electrifying pace that captures the tension of a tumultuous period in world history and has implications for solutions to the carnage in Iraq and Afghanistan."
Hamilton Spectator

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