The Welland Tribune

Nova Scotia honours HIV, minority rights activists

- MICHAEL TUTTON

HALIFAX — A former Nova Scotia school teacher who spent decades advocating for the rights of people with HIV accepted a provincial human rights award Monday, while cautioning against the rise of white nationalis­m.

Eric Smith was among six individual­s and groups recognized by the Nova Scotia Human Rights Commission at the Halifax ceremony.

Smith, 61, came to national attention in 1987 when he was forced out of his elementary school teaching job on Cape Sable Island, N.S., after local parents found out he had tested positive for HIV.

He went on to become a prominent advocate for the rights of gay and lesbian Canadians, to help lead the Nova Scotia Persons with AIDS Coalition, and to serve on the Nova Scotia Task Force on AIDS — which produced recommenda­tions that influenced a generation of politician­s and policy-makers.

“It was truly inspiring to work with so many people with AIDS who fought to die with dignity. Many of them had been disowned by their families, so it was truly amazing to watch these people cling to their humanity,” he said during his acceptance speech.

He recalled how he’d lost 550 friends and his partner to the illness, and said he hoped his human rights work has honoured their memory.

Smith said while the LGBTQ communitie­s have made major strides, people who fight for human rights should not be complacent.

He noted the rise of race-based nationalis­m in North America, suggesting if it gains political leverage in Canada it can roll back gains made in protecting the guarantees of human rights based on sexual orientatio­n, race and gender.

“These groups want to roll back all the social gains we’ve made in the past 50 years,” he said. “Being Queer would become illegal again, women would lose control of their reproducti­ve rights ... and diversity would become a four-letter word.”

Other recipients of awards emphasized the importance of countering false stereotype­s of racial communitie­s.

Kardeisha Provo, 18, received the youth award for her creation of YouTube videos that offer glimpses of day-to-day life in the predominan­tly black community of North Preston, showcasing some of the successful and hopeful moments in the lives of its residents.

“The land is beautiful, the people are beautiful and the people love very hard and unconditio­nally and they show that love to everyone that enters the community ... That’s what you see in my videos,” the Ryerson University student said in an interview after receiving her award.

Two awards were given to organizati­ons, including one to the Inverness Developmen­t Associatio­n for making beach facilities and the boardwalk in the Cape Breton community accessible to people with disabiliti­es.

The second organizati­on award was given to the South End Environmen­tal Injustice Society for its work addressing environmen­tal racism and promoting the health of the black community in Shelburne’s south end.

Louise Delisle, the 67-year-old chair of the group, spent years fighting for the closure of a local landfill that was located near the predominan­tly black community in the 1940s.

She said she’s now battling to obtain cleaner water for the area, and her group is working with partners to examine the long-term health fallout from being located near the garbage disposal area.

“This award belongs to all those people who have died of cancer and are sick in our community. …This award is for people who never had a voice,” she said in an interview.

The awards given out on Internatio­nal Human Rights Day also acknowledg­ed the work of DeRico Symonds, an advocate for youth and co-founder of a social enterprise employing young people in Halifax’s north end.

The Nova Scotia Human Rights Commission presented a second individual award to Huwaida Medani, an educator and inclusion consultant based in Halifax.

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Eric Smith

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