Gaudenz Canova was a Swisssocialist from Graubünden. A lawyer and Social Democratic politician, Canova was a member of the National Council from his native canton in 1922–1925 and 1928–1935. He continued to be elected to political offices in Graubünden into the 1940s. His political career is notable for his 1925 conviction for blasphemy and his participation in the Swiss left's struggle against fascism and pro-Nazi sentiment in the 1930s. Canova's 1940 condemnation of fascism in an opening speech before the Grand Council of Graubünden remained unpublished as a result of censorship until long after his death.
Biography
The son of farmer JakobDaniel Canova and his wife Maria Elisabeth, Gaudenz Canova was born on December 31, 1887 in the municipality Domat/Ems in Graubünden, Switzerland. At first educated at Swiss schools, he proceeded to study law in Berlin and Freiburg and was awarded the title of doctor of jurisprudence by the University of Freiburg. Canova became involved in Graubünden's social democratic politics as a lawyer in Chur. He was elected to his first term in the National Council of Switzerland in 1922, and was a part-time editor of Graubünden's Bündner Volkswacht during the 1920s. A proponent of secularist ideas, Canova was legally tried and convicted of blasphemy in 1925 for material published in the Volkswacht following a lawsuit begun on behalf of a Swiss Catholic association, and his career in the assembly came to a temporary halt after the controversy. A brief note on the episode in a March 1925 issue Time magazine reported that Reelected to the National Council in 1928-1935, Canova was one of the antagonists of the Swiss Nazi leaderWilhelm Gustloff in the 1930s, and acquired a reputation as a relentless opponent of the Nazis' sympathizers on the Swiss far right. Canova continued to hold political offices in Graubünden long after his second term with the National Council. During the Second World War, Canova delivered a notable anti-fascist speech as Graubünden Standespräsident in November 1940. Its content was officially censored, and the address remained unpublished until 1980. Canova died on January 21, 1962 in Chur, Graubünden.