Skip to main content

Canadian fashion company promotes assisted suicide’s ‘beauty’ in ad

Canadian fashion company La Maison Simons released a promotional video last month titled "All Is Beauty" promoting the 'beauty' of voluntary euthanasia.

Canadian fashion company La Maison Simons promoted the "beauty" in voluntary euthanasia in a promotional video last month that is causing outrage on social media.

The video titled, "All Is Beauty," chronicles the decision of Jennyfer Hatch — a 37-year-old Canadian woman — to voluntarily euthanize herself due to suffering from Ehlers-Danlos syndrome.

In the video, Hatch opens by stating that "dying in a hospital bed" is "not what's natural."

CANADIAN SOLDIER SUFFERING WITH PTSD OFFERED EUTHANASIA BY VETERANS AFFAIRS

"Last breaths are sacred. Even though as I seek help to end my life, with all the pain and in these final moments, there is still so much beauty," Hatch says in the Simons video.

The video — released one day after Hatch's euthanasia — at one point displays the text "the most beautiful exit."

Simons released a complimentary video interviewing President and Chief Executive Officer Peter Simons about the meaning of the ad.

CANADA EXPANDING ASSISTED SUICIDE LAW TO INCLUDE THE MENTALLY ILL, POSSIBLY ENABLE 'MATURE MINORS'

Simons says that the ad aimed to "help people to reconnect to each other and to this hope and optimism," which he says "is going to be needed if we're going to build the sort of communities and spaces where we want to live and that are enjoyable to live in."

While Canada allowed euthanasia six years ago, the practice has been limited to those with a terminal illness over the age of 18. However, in March of last year, the law was amended to allow for euthanasia for patients whose natural death is not "reasonably foreseeable," paving the way for the mentally ill to receive medical assistance in dying (MAID) in March 2023.

The legalization of active euthanasia has proved to be controversial throughout the world, with only seven countries allowing the practice as of 2022. Belgium and the Netherlands, who have some of the most permissive euthanasia policies in the world, were the first to legalize MAID in 2002. 

They were joined by Luxembourg in 2009, Columbia in 2014, Canada in 2016 and Spain and New Zealand last year.

Fox News's Michael Lee contributed to this report.

Data & News supplied by www.cloudquote.io
Stock quotes supplied by Barchart
Quotes delayed at least 20 minutes.
By accessing this page, you agree to the following
Privacy Policy and Terms and Conditions.