Monday, 4 April 2016

Black Lives Matter Canada - update


Kathleen Wynne meets with Black Lives Matter protestersPremier Kathleen Wynne met with more than 100 Black Lives Matter protesters rallying at Queen’s Park on Monday.
Ontario Premier Kathleen Wynne left Queen's Park on Monday to speak with more than 100 Black Lives Matter protesters.
Saying she had heard their anger about the police treatment of minorities, Premier Kathleen Wynne met with more than 100 Black Lives Matter protesters rallying at Queen’s Park on Monday.
In an unusual move, the premier – flanked by her security detail and three cabinet ministers – emerged from the front door of the legislature to address the chanting demonstrators.
“I am here because I think this is such an important issue,” Wynne told the crowd gathered in the snow.
“In my heart I believe that we all need to work together to make sure we get this right. The reason I’m out here is I want you to understand that,” she said.
Black Lives Matter activists – who have been staging a sit-in protest at Toronto police headquarters since March 20 after the Special Investigations Unit (SIU) decided not to charge the unnamed officer who shot and killed 45-year-old Andrew Loku last year – demonstrated at Wynne’s North Toronto home last week.
As the protesters chanted “give us the name, give us the name” of the officer in the Loku slaying, Wynne stressed she could not discuss specific cases.
“We are undertaking a review of the SIU. We are reviewing all the police oversight bodies. We need your help in doing that,” the premier said.
Wynne noted she recently launched Ontario’s anti-racism directorate and takes concerns about discrimination seriously.
The tense session near police barricades outside the Legislative Assembly lasted about seven minutes.
It’s the first time in many years that an Ontario premier has held an impromptu face-to-face meeting with protesters.
She was accompanied by Attorney General Madeleine Meilleur, Community Safety Minister Yasir Naqvi, and Culture Minister Michael Coteau, who is overseeing the new anti-racism directorate.
Black Lives Matter organizer Janaya Khan said “it’s an important step” to speak with Wynne.
“But I think thus far we’ve seen failures and broken promises and a lack of transparency so we’re going to be there and we’re going to show and hope that our demands are met,” said Khan.

Tuesday, 9 February 2016

Underground Railroad Facts For Kids!


African history is the oldest human history in the World. From Ancient Egypt to the present great leaders have shaped Africa and world history.
 
 During the seventeenth century, Africans were brought to the United States to work as slaves. By the mid-nineteenth century, slavery was a very common thing in the southern part of the United States.
Plantation owners used slaves to work their farms. Many of them picked cotton that was sold to clothing factories in Britain.
In the early 1800s, people known as abolitionists started an anti-slavery movement, and they worked to set up the Underground Railroad.

The Underground Railroad was a secret network of “safe houses” that were used to help slaves reach Canada, where slavery was strictly forbidden.

Estimates state that 30,000 to 40,000 African-Americans risked their lives to escape to either Canada or Mexico.

Professional bounty hunters stalked them so that they could return the slaves back to the plantation owners. Many African-Americans died while trying to escape to freedom.

It was also very dangerous for people to help the fleeing African-Americans, because if they were caught helping them, they could end up in jail or worse...

The fugitive African-Americans would travel at night following the big dipper and the North Star.

During the day, they would stay in safe houses. Often people who ran the safe houses would hang a lit lantern outside their homes letting the fugitives know their house was “safe.”

The fugitives arrived at points as far east as Nova Scotia and as far west as British Columbia, but most African-Americans landed in Southwestern Ontario.


Many of the fugitives went to the Dawn settlement (present day Dresden, Ontario), which had been started by a fugitive African-American named Josiah Henson.

This settlement was well established by 1842 and had a school, the British-American Institute, where African-Americans could be educated.

The settlement included farms, a gristmill, and a sawmill. Abolitionists in the United States gave money to support the Dawn Settlement.

The book, Uncle Tom’s Cabin, by Harriet Beecher Stowe, was apparently based on the life of Josiah Henson.

The Underground Railroad in Ontario Canada


The Underground Railroad - the meaning

Abolitionists (people who ended slavery) in Upper Canada were also involved in a more covert resistance to slavery within North America called the Underground Railroad. 
By the middle of the 19th century, the Underground Railroad had been developed by abolitionists and Quaker sympathizers to facilitate the escape of enslaved Blacks from the southern United States to Canada. 

The Underground Railroad was neither underground nor a railroad. It was a loosely constructed network of escape routes that originated in the southern United States, wound its way to the less restricted North and eventually stretched to Canada.
 
One of its most intriguing features was its lack of formal organization. The system largely succeeded because of the cooperation and trust among various religious and ethnic groups who moved freedom seekers towards Canada through a highly secretive network.

 

The journey to freedom was not an easy one. Freedom seekers travelled by coach, train, water and often for hundreds of miles on foot – with little food. Because of the great risk involved in their journey, they often travelled at night, hiding in swamps and woods during the day to avoid being captured. Despite being denied formal education, freedom seekers were able to develop an elaborate code of communication that included messages and instructions in spiritual songs and secret passwords and signals to guide over 30,000 people to safety in Canada.

Once safely established in Canada, many people risked their lives to return to the United States and help their fellow brothers and sisters reach freedom in Canada. One such individual was Harriet Tubman. Born in 1820, Tubman escaped slavery as a young woman and moved to St. Catharines, Ontario in 1851. As a guide on the Underground Railroad, she traveled back to the United States 19 times, risking her own freedom to aid others in their escape to Canada.

Some of the most poignant stops on the Ontario Underground Railroad are historic sites in Chatham-Kent. Considered the destination for freedom seekers, this region was home to some of the most successful black settlements and the greatest populace of former slaves in Canada. 

  Buxton National Historic Site & Museum



One of the last stops on the Underground Railroad, the Buxton National Historic Site & Museum that preserves the successful Buxton settlement features original structures built by slaves. 

At Ontario’s second largest national historic site, visitors can tour the last standing schoolhouse built by slaves, an 1852 log cabin, two churches, a cemetery and museum.


It was established as a community for and by former African-American slaves who escaped to Canada to gain freedom. Rev. William King, a Scots-Irish/American Presbyterian minister and abolitionist, had organized the Elgin Association to buy 9,000 acres of land for resettlement of the refugees, to give them a start in Canada. Within a few years, numerous families were living here, having cleared land, built houses, and developed crops. They established schools and churches, and were thriving before the American Civil War. Buxton now has a population of over 400 people. 

There was great interest in the settlement among Americans. Buxton was visited by a reporter from the New York Herald Tribune in 1857, and by the head of the American Freedmen's Inquiry Commission in the summer of 1863, established after President Abraham Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation had freed many slaves in the American South during the Civil War. These reports praised the achievements of the people of Buxton and other African Americans in Canada.


Chatham is about a 5 hour drive from Hamilton
The community is within the Chatham-Kent municipality and today has a population of approximately 200, almost exclusively Black Canadians. North Buxton's historic population peaked at more than 2000, almost exclusively descendants of freed and fugitive slaves who had escaped the United States via the Underground Railroad. Great Britain abolished slavery in its colonies in 1838 and it had never been widespread in Canada. The related community is South Buxton.