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Rachel Zellars - Canada's Long History of Racism

http://montrealgazette.com/news/quebec/opinion-canadas-long-history-of-anti-black-racism



Opinion: Canada's long history of racism

Our children are taught about the goodliness of the Underground Railroad, but never an honest history of our first public schools or black migration. That there are racist place names in Quebec is part of a long pattern.
ckground actors are seen during filming of "The Book Of Negroes" in Cole Harbour, N.S., on Monday, April 28, 2014. One of the most devastating ways that Canada has denied its own history of anti-black racism is through a narrative of benevolence that overshadows the human agency of black struggle, Rachel Zellars writes. DA“Their blood is in there, and they can’t throw it out.”


Comments

  1. Thank you for sharing this opinion article, the piece is right in stating that Canada has a terrible habit of suppressing our racist history specifically in relation to blackness. The article also mentions the United States, and its push from specific activist groups to dismantle public monuments that are representative of a white supremacy. The article speaks about a woman climbing to a flagpole to take down a confederate flag, but I immediately (as I am sure many of the people reading the article as well ) thought of the statue of Robert E. Lee and the Charlottesville riots that occurred this past summer.

    I also thought of another white supremacist monument in the United States that a friend of mine who was working as an intern with the National Advocate for Pregnant Woman activist group in New York City this summer, protested. That statue was of Dr J. Marion Sims who was one of the founders of modern day gynaecology but did so through the advent of slavery, performing horrifying and unethical surgeries on black women in the name of scientific discover. To learn more about that organization and the celebrated monster Dr. Sims here's a link to the organization's website: http://www.advocatesforpregnantwomen.org

    To return to the subject of Canada's habit of erasing racist elements of our history, I was reminded of a guest lecturer I heard in my first year of Concordia. Charmaine Nelson is a black art historian at McGill University that specializes in the visual culture of slavery. In the lecture, she showcased a variety of European Canadian painters whose depicted their slaves in their paintings, demonstrating that there was in fact slavery Canada, which Canadians often refuse to admit. Nelson has written a variety of books on art, slavery, and western history. For any of you interested, here is her background and the list of books she has written: https://www.mcgill.ca/ahcs/people-contacts/faculty/nelson

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