Tribal people under attack

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This International Day of the World’s Indigenous Peoples, Survival International is calling attention to some of the tribes who fell victim to genocide. The international organization, which advocates on behalf of tribal people worldwide, fears history could repeat itself if urgent action isn’t taken to protect a particular tribe on the Brazilian-Peruvian border.

Early last month, Survival International learned that a formerly uncontacted tribe (a tribe that had no previous contact with industrialised societies) reached out to the Ashaninka, a neighbouring tribe in Brazil.

“This uncontacted tribe said that they left their home because their elders had been massacred by non‑Indians and that all their homes had been burned,” explained Ilana Nevins, spokesperson for Survival International. “There were so many people killed that they couldn’t bury them all – that those who couldn’t be buried had been picked at by vultures.”

The organization suspects that illegal loggers and cocaine traffickers are the likely culprits of this flagrant level of violence. Many of the area’s tribal people have already been pushed further into the forest as illegal logging and drug traffickers encroach on their land.

In addition to violence, isolated tribes that come into contact with people from industrialized societies are highly susceptible to introduced diseases. In the mid 1990’s, more than half of the Nahua people were wiped out following their first contact with loggers.

Seven tribal people who made contact last month were already showing signs of influenza, a disease to which they have no acquired immunity. FUNAI, the Brazilian government body charged with protecting tribal territories and their people, treated five young men and two young women for the disease.

With 70 uncontacted tribes within its borders and 14 million hectares of land (roughly two-and-a-half times the size of Nova Scotia), FUNAI has a daunting task – and not enough funds to do it. But Nevins says things have been improving.

“There are people – FUNAI staff – that care deeply that making sure these people and this land is protected,” said Nevins. “But that’s not enough; right now, there aren’t enough funds to make sure that all the uncontacted land is being monitored – that illegal loggers, miners and other people focused on resource extraction are kept out of this land.”

Survival International would like to see the Brazilian government allocate more funds to FUNAI. At present, they are calling on the government to urgently re-staff a government outpost that was overrun in 2011 by illegal loggers and drug traffickers.

The staff there was working to monitor and protect the land where the uncontacted tribe is believed to have resided.

Survival International is asking people to sign and send an email to the Brazilian and Peruvian governments, calling on them to monitor and protect these uncontacted tribes and their land.

In March of this year, the Peruvian and Brazilian governments signed an agreement to cooperate on cross-border monitoring and protection.

“So far this has not been sufficient to ensure that these people are protected,” concluded Nevins.

Members can find out more about Survival International at www.survivalinternational.org. You may also be interested in other articles we’ve written about tribal people, including: Rethink Your Vocab and last year’s article on oil exploration encroaching on the Matsés’ land, which is located within Peruvian borders.

Learning to heal

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Last month, Ruby Langan organized a writing workshop focused on aboriginal awareness and healing. As UNE’s national equity representative for Aboriginal Peoples, Langan said the workshops’ participants had a very diverse range of interests.

“My intention was to get people writing and increase awareness of aboriginal human rights,” she said. “I believe that the writing process is a good way to start healing, which is a very important part of what I’m trying to accomplish.”

The workshop primarily attracted members of the aboriginal community around Vancouver. Langan said that many people are reluctant to begin writing. Participants were provided a safe, welcoming, encouraging environment and constructive feedback.

Residential schools and the foster care system have done untold damage to the links between First Nations Peoples and their culture.

“Cultural ties have been broken; people are just now trying to re-establish them,” she added.

Other topics discussed were individual healing journeys, drinkable water, human rights, marriage in traditional aboriginal societies, and environmental protection.

“I was amazed that we could have such a diverse range of interests and expertise in the workshop participants.”

“Many of us could benefit from healing,” concluded Langan. “I am on a healing journey. I am on a learning journey. Aren’t we all?”

“The relationship between Canada and First Nations is ever-changing. We can bring together learners and teachers and empower our members – aboriginal and non-aboriginal.”

Around the same time, the PSAC regional office in Quebec also provided a two-day training session on aboriginal issues. Julie Dubois, an assistant regional vice-president in Quebec, couldn’t wait to participate.

“As a young woman of aboriginal origin, I have a tremendous drive to learn more about the realities of Aboriginal Peoples in Canada,” explained Dubois. “It’s important to me to be able to debunk and challenge the myths surrounding aboriginal people.”

Dubois pointed out that most people know very little about aboriginal communities, other than the disinformation that takes place in the media.

Magali Picard, regional executive vice-president for the PSAC’s Quebec region, took the opportunity to deliver a speech that blew away the room.

“It’s as if her words came out as flaming arrows – she has an energy that is completely hypnotising and a charisma that could capsize any enemy,” declared Dubois.

A subject that frequently made its appearance was the Idle No More movement – and how allies can support its cause. Participants were even treated to a video that put the spotlight on the co-founders of the movement’s Quebec branch.

Another noteworthy moment was a heartfelt testimonial by Viviane Michel, who heads Quebec Native Women Inc. She touched on a host of challenges that aboriginal women grapple with, including the lack of resources, difficult financial situations, single mothers and the differences in language, among others.

Another important topic was the troubling number of missing and murdered aboriginal women. Michel also took the opportunity to mention that an equally troubling number of aboriginal men are missing. VICE recently reported that Six Nations Journalist Jen MtPleasant has compiled a database of over 600 missing or murdered aboriginal men in Canada.

The number of missing and murdered native women is estimated to be anywhere from 600 to 4,000; the range is indicative of a systematic problem when it comes to law enforcement collecting racial data.

In the end, Dubois said she left the training with new convictions with respect to aboriginal solidarity. Eager to share her experience, she wrote a two-page report that she intends to share with her region.

“While I’ve satisfied my thirst for knowledge, I can tell you that I still have a really strong desire to learn more – I can feel it in my veins!

 

 

 

Canadian Multiculturalism Day – June 27

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By Amit Deo

Early 1980s: I’m at my father’s side in a large superstore’s pharmacy. We have just come from the emergency room. In the car, my mother is running an alarmingly high fever, awaiting the prescription to pull her back from acute danger. Frustrated and rather demandingly, my father asks the pharmacist who made an error in preparing my mother’s prescription to quickly remake the batch. The man in line behind us grows impatient. Assuming the mistake was ours and not realizing the urgency in this, he starts berating my father.

“Hurry the fuck up, you fucking Paki!”

Unbeknownst to him, my father doesn’t back down from confrontation easily, or rather, at all. This conversation is then, as they say, “taken outside”. In the parking lot, my father and this man verbally collide. The man screams a stream of obscenities and other classic slanders.

“You don’t even belong here. Go back to your own fucking country!”

My father, at this point, is basically looking for an opening to use his fists rather than his words. My poor mother, leaning out of the car window, is barely lucid and sobbing – but she musters the energy to tell my father to get back into the car.

As an eight year old boy at the time, I was standing on the curb, nervous and confused, crying my eyes out. Innocently though, as an undercurrent of thought, wondered if the word “Paki” had something to do with Pac Man – which I loved – but simply out of context, figured it did not.

Fast-forward to 2014: I’m at a crowded Thai restaurant with friends; the place is filled with people from all ethnic backgrounds. I can hear the waitress taking the order of the table next to us. Everyone at the table is an ethnic minority. The server, racially visible herself, finishes her task and leaves. The table then starts poking fun at the server; they are being very judgemental and critical. They mock her accent and her ethnicity. They don’t hesitate to make many negative assumptions about a woman they have never met before.

The first example I shared with you is a rather typical experience that I’m sure many racially visible people have faced; being criticized by another who’s not part of the minority. This is, and was, not uncommon, especially in years past and in rural communities. In my second example, we have different ethnic minority groups, one being critical of the other. Both groups are equally Canadian; both, I’m sure, experienced similar struggles in this country and yearn for a better a life.

Canada embraced a multiculturalism policy in 1971; it was a huge victory in the movement towards equality. Yet, as American philosopher John Dewey once said, “Arriving at one goal is the starting point to another”.

Many of us may see ourselves as equal, yet choose to not view others as equal to us. Canadians may have a hard time defining our national identity, but at the core, we are just that: Canadians.

Whether our origins are found in France, Poland, India or Japan, we ultimately found our way here for the betterment of ourselves, our families and our future generations. That is what we have in common, and what we know can be achieved in our country. Retaining our mother cultures is difficult, but vitally important. Equally important, however, is accepting and adopting the culture and identity of the country we live in. Being a citizen of this country gives us equal rights, but also demands equal responsibility.

Multiculturalism in Canada does not just mean accepting other cultures, races, and religions – it means accepting each of them as equal to our own. Multiculturalism isn’t just about sharing our foods and traditions with each other. It’s about standing together for equality. Canada is not a country that yields to intolerance, yet injustices still occur and many still choose to ignore that they do.

However subtle or blatant, discrimination is a common occurrence. We read headlines on a daily basis that  report on the state of countries where similar ethnic groups are at war with each other, intolerant of each other; Ukraine, Sudan, Korea, Libya. As diverse Canadians, we have to set the standard. We are no better if we cannot accept each other as one.

Our differences are what make us stronger.

Our acceptance of each other should be the model to be mirrored by other countries.

Through acceptance, not judgement, we achieve wholeness. Multiculturalism is equality.

Diversity is continually rising in Canada. We are at a verge of either being a country that treats one another with respect and dignity, or one that keeps ourselves guarded with our differences at arm’s length: pockets of groups not willing to share or let each other in. We should feel like we can walk into any place in this country. Whether that be the newest trendy steak house, or the little hole in the wall Chinese noodle restaurant.

We should not feel judged solely based on how we look. We may not have to agree on everything, but we have to accept and respect one another. Wouldn’t you agree? Well, maybe we can discuss this further over some dim sum. Join me?

Amit Deo is the alternate to the UNE’s national equity representative for racially visible people. If you’d like to take him up on the dim sum, you’ll have to meet him in Coquitlam, British Columbia where he is also the local president of composite Local 20088.

[Editor’s note: There are many schools of thought when it comes to including profanity in articles. The Canadian Press Stylebook points out that “profanity that is used for its own sake does not enlighten a reader” – and we absolutely agree. However, it also states that there are exceptions: “a profanity might be essential to an accurate understanding of the facts or emotions that are driving a story.” In this case, we chose to include the profanity to give readers an accurate portrayal of the vitriol that equity-seeking groups often face.]

Duty to accommodate and medical marijuana

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The duty-to-accommodate doesn’t make the news very often, but it did last week in an Ottawa Citizen article examining whether the use of medical marijuana could force the return of smoking rooms.

“In an era of smoking bans on patios, parks and restaurants, the notion may seem absurd, but those relying on marijuana to ease chronic pain and other conditions may soon be demanding accommodation for their medically prescribed and commercially grown medication.”

Medical marijuana use has been on the rise since it was first legalized in 2001. In just over a decade, the number of Canadians authorized to possess medical marijuana has jumped from 477 in 2002 to 37,359 in 2013. Health Canada projects the number to rise to 58,000 in 2014 and skyrocket to 450,000 in another ten years.

It’s no wonder some labour experts are predicting that this will become a big issue – one that is already sparking debate.

Last year, an RCMP officer made headlines when his employer told him he couldn’t smoke his legally prescribed marijuana while in uniform. The officer has been using the drug to help him calm down and treat his PTSD symptoms.

The RCMP felt that smoking in public or while in uniform would “not portray the right message to the general public.”

The use of medical marijuana poses a complex issue for employers, who have to grapple with the duty to accommodate on one side; public perception and health and safety on the other.

Given its long history of being a controlled substance, users of medical marijuana have to combat a certain level of stigma associated with the drug. The Canadian Association of Medical Cannabis Dispensaries hopes that discussions like these will help shift the public perception of marijuana from illicit drug to medicine.

On the health and safety front, some employers may be concerned about a person’s ability to safety and effectively perform their work while taking the drug. It’s important that these employees are not endangering their safety or that of others. In the future, it may be possible for patients to obtain “designer marijuana”; strains of the drug designed to treat specific symptoms without affecting cognitive and motor skills.

But these issues don’t negate the employer’s duty to accommodate these individuals to the point of undue hardship. Fundamentally, these are people who are merely treating a disability.

So, will the duty to accommodate lead to smoking rooms? It could: the cost of establishing a smoking room doesn’t constitute undue hardship. In other cases, a person’s accommodation needs could easily be addressed by simply offering more frequent breaks.

In an article for Occupational Safety Canada, Cheryl Edwards offers a few tips for employers. Among them, she suggests working “with the employee, his union representative and medical professionals to determine what checks and balances will need to be in place to ensure the employee, co-workers, the public and the environment are properly safeguarded.”

Finally, she recommends not getting distracted by the drug causing the impairment, but to focus on the issue of impairment instead.

“Treat this source the same as you would any other prescription drug.”

June: National Aboriginal History Month

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In 1939, thirteen Native people participating in a conference on First Nation welfare took a bold stand. While other delegates busied themselves passing resolutions urging greater attention to the plight of aboriginal communities, the Indian delegation defected to pass a resolution of their own.

The Toronto-Yale Conference on the North American Indian seemed very well-intentioned. Over seventy delegates participated in the two-week affair. Among them were Canadian and American academics, missionaries and government officials.1 Thirteen Native people were invited, among them an Iroquois anthropologist, a Cherokee missionary, a Haida United Church minister and a Six Nations lawyer. The Indian delegation also included Edith Brant Monture; the great-great-granddaughter of famous Iroquois Chief Joseph Brant.2

The conference was designed “to reveal the conditions today of the white man’s Indian wards, and in a scientific, objective and sympathetic spirit, plan with them for their future.” 3

For all of its good intensions, the non-aboriginal conference participants assumed that assimilation was both beneficial and inevitable.

“The guiding belief was that the Indian peoples were to be the recipients of change, not the choosers. In standard colonial parlance, they were variously described as wards or children. It was, however, colonialism with a difference, for the goal was not independence, but disappearance.”4

Since assimilation was viewed as inevitable, the only debates centered on how fast it should happen.

The crackpot ideas machine went into overdrive when Diamond Jenness, a Canadian anthropologist, suggested establishing small colonies of Inuit around major Canadian cities. Because, you know, who wants to live in the North? The anthropologist believed that the Inuit would be better off learning English and marketable skills in southern Canada rather than inevitably becoming unemployed, welfare-dependant and demoralized in the North.5

On the last day of the conference, a resolution was passed calling for greater awareness of “the psychological, social and economic maladjustments of the Indian populations of the United States and Canada.” Then a committee was formed to determine how the conference’s findings should be disseminated. 6

“And then a very dramatic defection took place. The Indian delegates broke from the main group and met separately to pass their own resolutions. […]

While appreciative of their invitation to the conference, the Indians resolved to have their own meetings. They didn’t need government officials, missionaries [or] white sympathizers […] to speak for them.”7

The Native delegates called for an “all-Indian conference on Indian affairs,” comprising of only “bona fide Indian leaders actually living among the Indian people of the reservations and reserves”. Such a conference, they implored, ought to be “free of political, anthropological, missionary, administrative, or other domination.”8

Their bold move, their call to action and the conference overall went largely unnoticed; by the time the event was over, Canada was already one week into its World War 2.


[1] Francis, R. D., & Jones, R. (1988). Destinies: Canadian history since Confederation. Toronto: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston of Canada.

[2] A Cassidy, F. (1991). Aboriginal self-determination: proceedings of a conference held September 30-October 3, 1990. Lantzville, BC: Oolichan Books.

[3] Francis, R. D., & Jones, R. (1988). Destinies: Canadian history since Confederation. Toronto: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston of Canada.

[4] Cairns, A. (2000). Citizens plus: aboriginal peoples and the Canadian state. Vancouver: UBC Press.

[5] Idem

[6] Francis, R. D., & Jones, R. (1988). Destinies: Canadian history since Confederation. Toronto: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston of Canada.

[7] Cassidy, F. (1991). Aboriginal self-determination: proceedings of a conference held September 30-October 3, 1990. Lantzville, BC: Oolichan Books.

[8] Francis, R. D., & Jones, R. (1988). Destinies: Canadian history since Confederation. Toronto: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston of Canada.

May 17 – Int’l Day Against Homophobia & Transphobia

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by Kate Hart

Since 2005, May 17 has been dedicated to the International Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia. The date marks the day in 1990 when the World Health Organization removed homosexuality from its list of mental disorders.

It was originally called the International Day Against Homophobia; a day intended to broaden awareness of the discrimination, violence and persecution experienced by lesbian, gay, bisexual, trans and intersex people around the world.

In 2009, following increased recognition that trans communities experienced aggravated forms of gender-based violence with distinct patterns different from homophobia, the name evolved to its current form: the International Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia.

In just a decade, this movement has spread worldwide; there are events are taking place in over 120 countries this year.

Wonderful work – but we have miles to go before we sleep. Being LGBT is still illegal in over 80 countries.

Can you even imagine what it would be like for your very existence to be declared illegal? Something you have no control over – just for being born that way, you are illegal.

This is a daily reality for the LGBT community in those countries, which represent over 40% of the world’s population.

How about sitting on death row because you dared to love? Ten countries still consider being LGBT a crime punishable by death! For daring to love. For daring to express that love for another human being.

Somehow, I suspect that this wouldn’t stand if the persecution was of heterosexual people; I’m certain that governments of the world would see this as a much bigger problem.

So, here is my challenge to all of you: get off your butts and help change this deplorable situation. Start lobbying your MPs to tie foreign aid funding to human rights. Start a letter campaign to every MP in this country telling them this is unacceptable – that we, as Canadians, should be leading the world on human rights issues like this. Join the rallies and celebrations of this day in your community and show your support.

Help stop the hate.

Help end the killing and persecution of a segment of society whose only crime was being born the way they are.

Kate Hart is the Union of National Employees’ national equity representative for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender people. This article was written as part of our union’s member journalism program. If you’d like to find out more, click here – to pitch a story or for any questions, please send an email to communications@une-sen.org.

Raising the bars

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The pride flag will be flown above the Gaspé town hall this month, thanks to the actions of one dedicated human rights activist.

Géraldine Fortin, our human rights representative for the Quebec region, approached her town’s mayor last week to convince him to recognize May 17: the International Day Against Homophobia and Transphobia.

“I didn’t have to do a lot of convincing,” admits Fortin. “I had all my arguments ready – I didn’t need to use any.”

“It went really well. They were very open to the idea.”

This won’t be the first time that the town of Gaspé will make a statement in favour of free expression. During the most recent winter Olympics, Gapsé’s city hall was among countless others across the country that flew the pride flag in opposition to Russia’s draconian anti-gay laws.

For a town of just over 15,000 people, it’s a very powerful statement.

“It sends a message about openness to diversity,” says Fortin.

But this time, a UNE member will be the one hoisting the flag. That’s right; the mayor is delegating the honour to Fortin.

“I’m going to wear a shirt sporting the UNE logo,” said Fortin, proudly.

With May 17 fast approaching, Fortin is daring other members to do something similar in their communities.

“I’m sure there are similar actions that can be done,” said Fortin. “I’m sure I’m not the only one who lives in a small community.”

If you take up Géraldine Fortin’s challenge, please let us know by sending us an email.

In this photo: Daniel Côté, Gaspé mayor; Manon Minville, Local 10040; and Géraldine Fortin, human rights representative, Quebec.
In this photo: Daniel Côté, Gaspé mayor; Manon Minville, Local 10040; and Géraldine Fortin, human rights representative, Quebec.

Asian Heritage Month

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When we wrote about Asian Heritage Month last year, we focused on the difficulties faced by Chinese immigrants between confederation and the early 1920s. But the end of the Chinese Head Tax didn’t mark the end of discriminatory policies.

Japanese immigrants began arriving in Canada in the 1870s in search of a better life. Like their Chinese counterparts, they had to contend with fervently anti-Asian attitudes in British Columbia.

But those attitudes grew even worse during World War 2. After the Japanese attacked Pearl Harbour on December 7, 1941, Prime Minister W. L. Mackenzie King declared war on Imperial Japan.

Only days later, 1,975 Canadian soldiers surrendered to the Japanese during the Battle of Hong Kong. Reports of murder, cruelty and starvation of these prisoners of war “increased the fear and hatred of Canadians for their Japanese-Canadian neighbours.”1

“Of the more than 23,000 [Japanese immigrants] in Canada at the time, over 75 per cent were Canadian Citizens. All were designated enemy aliens by government regulations.”2

It wouldn’t take long before the government mandated that all Japanese immigrants, whether naturalized citizens or Canadian-born, had to register with the Registrar of Enemy Aliens.

On January 14, 1942, Prime Minister Mackenzie King declared a large portion of the Pacific coast a “protected area”. First, a curfew was imposed requiring every person of the Japanese race to home after sunset and stay there until sunrise. If you lived in the protected area, you weren’t permitted to use or own a motor vehicle, a camera or a radio. 3

Within a few months, the government began to forcibly remove Japanese men from the protected area.

Japanese Canadians were told to pack a single suitcase each and taken to holding areas, to wait for trains to take them inland. Vancouver’s Hastings Park was one of areas where families waited, sometimes for months, to be relocated.”

More than 20,000 Japanese were moved to remote areas of British-Columbia. The majority of those displaced were actually born Canadian citizens. A year later, all their possessions that had been seized by the federal government were liquidated.

Even at the end of the war, King continued to bow to the most strident demands of the politicians. He offered the Japanese two choices: go back to Japan or disperse ‘east of the Rockies’.”

Many men were taken from their families and sent to work in road camps in Ontario and near the border between Alberta and British Columbia – while their wives and children were sent to camps. Families who wanted to remain together went Eastward, to Alberta and Manitoba, where they often performed back-breaking work on sugar beet farms.

In her book, Japanese Canadian Journey: the Nakagama Story, Dr. Rochelle Sato-Yamagishi writes about her family’s experience. After been uprooted from Steveston, British Columbia, her father moved to Lethbridge, Alberta, where he opened the first Albertan Japanese food store.4

“Similar to all the evacuees to Alberta, my father and mother endured great hardship, but characteristic of Japanese Canadians as a whole, I am struck with how they turned adversity into opportunity. They focused on getting through each day, hoping for a better life, and seemed to never allow their dream to be stolen from them.” 5

“I am most impressed by the fact that, despite having lost so much in Steveston, they never became bitter, as they established a new home in southern Alberta.”6

 


[1] Hickman, P. and Fukawa, M. (2011). Righting Canada’s Wrongs: Japanese Canadian Internment in the Second World War. Toronto, ON: James Lorimer & Company Ltd., Publishers..

[2] Idem

[3] Idem

[4] Yamagishi, N. R. (2010) Japanese Canadian Journey: The Nakagama Story. Victoria, B.C.: Trafford.

[5] Idem

[6] Idem

March 21: International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination

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by Céline Ahodékon

When I was assigned to write something on March 21, the International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination, I had no idea of what to say until today.

Out of the blue, I remembered something that happened to one of my friends, a few years ago. I’m always surprised at how some people can judge others or deny them service based on only one characteristic. Do you know that some people can identify your race or your ethnic origin just by hearing your name or the sound of your voice?

The story I am about to tell you is a true story. However, to protect the identity of the people involved, I am using fictitious names.

A few years ago, a friend of mine was looking for an apartment to rent for his family of four; let’s call him Latif. As you may have guessed, Latif is a racially-visible man.

It was a hot and beautiful summer day when a local newspaper ad caught his attention. One particular building was offering apartments of all sizes. It was in a great location, the rent was affordable and the amenities were great!

He immediately dialed the number, introduced himself and asked if he could visit one of the three-bedroom apartments listed in the paper.

The voice on the other end of the phone paused, stammered and hesitated before answering.

“I am sorry, all the apartments are rented already; there’s no need to visit,” explained the person on the other end of the call.

Latif was surprised and shocked by what he just heard. Later, he expressed his amazement to his wife, Marie; a native of the area who speaks the local language fluently.

“It’s only 1 p.m. and all these apartments listed in the newspaper are already rented?”

Marie was puzzled and suspicious. She wondered if the landlord was telling the truth or if her husband was the victim of discrimination. She called the same place from her mobile phone, only minutes later.

Marie introduced herself using her maiden name, which is a common name in the area. She asked if there were still apartments to rent.

There were plenty.

She was quickly invited to visit them.

Marie decided to visit the apartments with Latif, her racially-visible husband, and confront the landlord. While he was very apologetic (and sweating profusely!), he offered no explanation for his attitude towards Latif. At least, in the end, he was left with big dose of lessons.

Because discrimination is subjective and can be very subtle, we will never know why the building owner didn’t want to rent an apartment to Latif, but offered one to Marie. Was Latif being discriminated or was it a mistake? Would the owner of the apartments have rented to Marie if she had introduced herself under Latif’s name when she called? There are many of unanswered questions!

This incident might be an isolated case, but incidents like this happen all too often. We all have an important role and a responsibility to build workplaces and communities that are free of racism.

Brother s and sisters, March 21 is the International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination. I’m inviting all of us to become Marie in the story – to denounce and take action against all forms of racial discrimination.

Let’s not be silent bystanders; our silence can be hurtful.

Let’s stand and speak up for those who can’t defend themselves.

 

Céline Ahodekon is the Union of National Employees’ national equity representative for racially-visible people. She is also a chief steward for Local 20278, which represents members at Fort Langley National Historic Park and the Vancouver Parks office, in British Columbia.

International Francophonie Day

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By Yvon Beaudoin

On this International Francophonie Day, I would like to paint a picture for you of the 9,178,100 Canadians who speak French in Canada.

At the 2013 annual meeting of the members of the FTQ’s Francization Committee, Suzanne Dionne Coster and Mariette Rainville of the Commission nationale des parents francophones presented the following overview of the health of the francophonie in the various regions of Canada. We have taken the liberty here of presenting this data as an infographic.

franco_infographic_e

 

At first glance, one might tend to believe that the francophone community is faring well in Canada. But one look at the impact of the $5.2 billion in cutbacks announced by the Conservative government in 2012 paints another reality.

According to Claude Poirier, President of the Canadian Association of Professional Employees (CAPE), francophones are now being asked to write their documents in English to reduce translation costs.

Le Devoir reported that:

“According to Public Works Canada, to which the Translation Bureau reports, business volume went from $253 million in 2010–2011 to $231 million the following year, a decrease of 9%. The 2012–2013 Report on Plans and Priorities forecasts revenue of barely $191 million.”

In addition, the Conservative government is content to sit back when talks turn to official languages. In December, the Conservative government voted against two motions tabled by Yvon Godin, NPD Critic for Official Languages.

The purpose of the motions was to “have the Minister of Justice and the Minister of Fisheries and Oceans appear before the Official Languages Committee to present important updates on access to justice in both official languages and on the future of the Quebec Marine Search and Rescue Centre.”

The budgetary constraints imposed by the Conservative government are a major threat to the vitality of Canada’s two official languages. Ask your member of parliament to act.

Our members should demand to work in the official language of their choice!