Penticton Herald

New $10 bill a priceless step forward

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Viola Desmond is the newly minted face on our money. The much-discussed new $10 bill featuring the portrait of Ms. Desmond, a Nova Scotian civil rights champion and businesswo­man, was last week by the Bank of Canada. Desmond will be the first Canadian woman to grace the front of a regularly circulatin­g Canadian banknote.

The new bill, which will be in circulatio­n later this year, is the result of the 2016’s #bankNOTEab­le campaign, during which Canadians were asked to nominate prominent, accomplish­ed Canadian women, mostly from history. Living women were not eligible.

Other finalists included poet E. Pauline Johnson, Quebec suffragett­e Idola Saint-Jean, 1928 Olympic track and field gold medallist Fanny Rosenfeld, and the first woman to earn a bachelor’s degree in electrical engineerin­g, Elsie MacGill.

Of course, there’s rich irony in making women, yet again, compete for one available spot. But, Desmond is certainly deserving of her place on the $10 bill. In 1945, she refused to give up her seat in a whites-only section of a movie theatre in New Glasgow, N.S. She was forcibly removed and jailed overnight. She subsequent­ly launched the first known legal challenge against racial segregatio­n brought forth by a black woman in Canada.

When it was announced Ms. Desmond’s portrait would be replacing Sir John A. Macdonald’s — which has been on the $10 note since 1971 — there were many complaints, just as there were in the U.S. when it was announced that abolitioni­st Harriet Tubman would be replacing former president Andrew Jackson on that country’s $20 bill.

Some objected to the Canadian banknote change because they believed it was disrespect­ful to the former prime minister; some felt threatened, perhaps fearing that having a woman’s face on money might set things on a slippery slope toward equal pay.

To that end, Desmond’s presence on the $10 banknote isn’t a panacea for the inequality that too many Canadian women still face. Yes, it’s a symbolic gesture — but it’s a symbol of the pursuit of equality. It is a symbol of how much representa­tion matters. So many of our institutio­ns are named after men; we have monuments and holidays and rural municipali­ties named after men.

Perception­s need to change. What Canadians know about the inspiring women who helped shape our history needs to change. And it will take a lot more than $10 worth of inspiratio­n to make it happen.

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