Dior names Belgian designer to succeed John Galliano sacked for anti-Semitic outbursts
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                  World Jewish News

                  Dior names Belgian designer to succeed John Galliano sacked for anti-Semitic outbursts

                  Dior names Belgian designer to succeed John Galliano sacked for anti-Semitic outbursts

                  11.04.2012, Jews and Society

                  French fashion powerhouse Dior on Monday named Raf Simons as chief designer to succeed disgraced John Galliano who was fired more than a year ago for racist outbursts.
                  The 44-year-old Belgian, who started out designing furniture, will be responsible for Haute Couture, Ready-to-Wear and Women's Accessories, the Paris-based fashion house said in a statement.
                  He will premiere his first Christian Dior Haute Couture collection in Paris in July, said Dior, one of the crown jewels in Bernard Arnault's LVMH luxury empire.
                  Dior hailed the Belgian as "one of the biggest contemporary talents", saying that "he will inspire and push into the 21st century the style that Mr Dior launched with the opening of his house and that has changed, since its first collection, the codes of world elegance."
                  The designer in turn hailed his new employer as "a symbol of absolute elegance."
                  Flamboyant British designer Galliano was sacked last year after a video emerged of him hurling anti-Semitic slurs at patrons in a Paris bar.
                  Since then, his former righthand man Bill Gaytten has overseen Dior collections.
                  Galliano was convicted of anti-Semitism by a French court in September, receiving suspended fines totalling 6,000 euros (8,400 dollars) after the court accepted his argument that he was sorry for his actions.
                  The Paris criminal court found him guilty of making anti-Semitic insults in public -- an offence under French law -- when he clashed with bar patrons in the capital's Marais district on two occasions, in 2010 and 2011.
                  The court ordered Galliano to pay a symbolic euro in damages to each of the victims and to five anti-racism groups that were plaintiffs in the case. He was also told to pay the associations 16,500 euros in legal costs.
                  The 50-year-old designer later checked into rehab for two months in Arizona and Switzerland.

                  by: Gersende Rambourg

                  EJP