John Norman Zaritsky is a Canadian documentarian filmmaker. He was the recipient of an Oscar in 1982 for his documentary Just Another Missing Kid. He also won a Cable Ace Award in 1987 for , a Golden Gavel Award from the American Bar Association for My Husband is Going to Kill Me, a Robert F. Kennedy Foundation Award for "Born in Africa", and a DuPont-Columbia Award in 1994 for Romeo and Juliet in Sarajevo. Born in St. Catharines, Ontario, the son of Yvonne Joan and Dr. Michael Zaritsky, he graduated from Denis Morris Catholic High School in 1961, and then graduated in 1965 from the Trinity College of the University of Toronto. Prior to entering film, Zaritsky worked as a newspaper reporter for seven years. In 1970, he received a Ford Foundation Fellowship to study at the Washington Journalism Center. In 1972, he won a National Newspaper Award for his investigative reporting at The Globe and Mail newspaper. His films have won awards at the New York Film Festival, the American Film Festival, Banff Television Festival, Houston International Film Festival, Columbus OhioFilm Festival, and the John Muir Medical Film Festival. Three films, "Broken Promises", "Born in Africa", and "Romeo and Juliet in Sarajevo" were nominated for Emmy Awards. In addition, Zaritsky has won six Geminis, Canada's national television award. In 1995-96, he was an artist-in-residence at the graduate school of journalism, University of California at Berkeley. He also directed and produced the documentary Right to Die?, which documented the assisted suicide of Craig Ewert by the group Dignitas. The film also features a discussion of the case of Betty and George Coumbias, a Canadian couple seeking legal approval for their suicide pact. Right to Die? attracted extraordinary publicity in Britain when it aired in December 2008. According to the Associated Press, "The documentary... has been shown on Canadian and Swiss TV and at numerous film festivals, where it provoked little controversy. But it struck a raw nerve in Britain, where the divisive debate over assisted suicide remains unresolved." In 2012 he directed Do You Really Want To Know? which recounts the stories of three families who carry the gene for Huntington's Disease, a fatal neurodegenerative illness that attacks in mid-life. Members of each featured family have undergone predictive testing to learn whether or not they have inherited the gene that causes the disease, and thus learn whether or not they will die from it. Do You Really Want To Know? received two Golden Sheaf Awards at the Yorkton Film Festival: Best Documentary, and Best Director ; a Chris Award at the Columbus International Film & Video Festival for Best Documentary in the Science + Technology division, and the Best Documentary award at the Okanagan International Film Festival. Its broadcast premiere took place on November 13, 2012 on Knowledge Network.