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UVic booklet outlines racist history as B.C.'s 150th year approaches

A new educational resource looks at British Columbia’s long history of racist policies and the resiliency of the many Indigenous, Black and racialized people who have been affected.
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People march down the railroad tracks in Duncan during a Black Lives Matter rally on June 12, 2020. It was one of many events that erupted internationally after George Floyd, a Black man, was killed by police in Minneapolis, Minn. Photo by Jacqueline Ronson

A new educational resource looks at British Columbia’s long history of racist policies and the resiliency of the many Indigenous, Black and racialized people who have been affected.

The open-source booklet Challenging Racist British Columbia: 150 Years and Counting was released last week by co-publishers the University of Victoria and the Canadian Centre for Policy Alternatives.

The 80-page document is being made available as B.C. approaches its 150th anniversary of joining Canada this July 20.

“In 1871, this province joined the Canadian federation and, ever since, communities of Indigenous, Black, and other racialized peoples have waged protracted struggles against the dispossession of Indigenous lands, institutionalized discrimination, and the politics of exclusion,” the report begins. “They have won many victories, yet, 150 years later, we are witnessing yet another uprising against systemic racism.”

The booklet was written by a group of academics and activists from diverse communities, who link historical events to recent anti-racism movements — around Black Lives Matter, the Wet’suwet’en blockades and more.

One of the report’s authors Christine O’Bonsawin, a historian from the Abenaki, Odanak Nation, says the goal of the report is to educate people in B.C. about the many injustices that haven’t been widely discussed in schools.

O’Bonsawin is faculty in UVic’s History and Indigenous Studies departments, and the university’s former director of Indigenous Studies.

“An important role of historians is to connect the past with the present,” she said in an interview with IndigiNews.

“No doubt it’s a booklet about justice, and it’s about racism and oppression, but we wanted to prioritize activism, resistance and resilience.”

The booklet’s authors say it’s meant to be used by teachers, scholars, policymakers and others doing anti-racism work. O’Bonsawin says those behind the report are doing outreach to provincial education organizations.

“One of our guiding objectives was that we hoped this would be useful for teachers to support the K-12 Indigenization process,” she says.

“We wanted to make sure this was a public document, that was accessible to all.”

The document is divided into six sections covering various stories from the Indigenous, Black, Chinese, South Asian and Japanese communities. It spans from 1871, when B.C. joined Canada, to the present day.

It includes historical photos, poems, and profiles of key people and organizations.

Sharanjit Kaur Sandhra — one of the report’s authors and co-ordinator of the South Asian Studies Institute at the University of the Fraser Valley and co-curator of exhibits at the Sikh Heritage Museum — says it counteracts inaccurate information about B.C. history.

“This book offers a bold, honest, historical correction to the false narrative that Canada is exempt fro m white supremacy and racist nation state formations,” Sandhra says in a statement.

“And for that reason, this book is the exact resource needed in this pivotal moment where an anti-racist movement continues to take shape. It is a resource for activists, students, educators, community professionals — it is a resource for all.”

Sylvia Mangue Alene, president of the B.C. Black History of Awareness Society, says the booklet showcases how racism must be challenged.

“In this booklet, subjects have answered in a very clear way what needs to be challenged, and that is racism,” she says in a statement.

“Racism is challenged because we believe that there are better ways to treat people and that is with respect and inclusiveness in all aspects that life has to offer.”

With B.C.’s 150th anniversary approaching, report co-author John Price, a historian at UVic, adds that it marks the ways in which activists and communities have been standing up to racism since the province’s formation.

“Hopefully it serves as a wake-up call to governments that no longer should they engage in divide-and-rule policies. 150 years is long enough,” he says.

The booklet’s other authors are Nicholas XEMŦOLTW̱ Claxton, Denise Fong, Fran Morrison and Maryka Omatsu.

According to the resource website and accompanying press release, an interactive digital version of the resource “providing direct access to primary and community-based sources,” as well as an accompanying 20-minute video, will be released sometime this spring. — The Discourse