Truro News

Show of solidarity

People rally in Halifax to denounce racism

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More than 100 people gathered in a Halifax park Tuesday to criticize the rise of the white supremacis­t movement in the United States and recall racism’s role in Canadian history.

The gathering took place around the statue of Halifax’s founder Edward Cornwallis, a bronze monument that Mi’kmaq groups have long argued should be taken down.

Several speakers drew comparison­s between the movement to remove the colonial governor and efforts to take down statues in the southern United States that commemorat­e leaders of the Confederac­y.

Brad Vaughan, a member of one of the groups that helped organize the gathering, said the anti-racism protest was called as part of a wider national movement to show solidarity with victims of weekend violence in Virginia that left one woman dead and 19 others injured.

He said it was important to demonstrat­e the white supremacy movement needs to be actively resisted and said he hopes protests across the country counter its rise.

Last month, a group of off-duty Armed Forces members disrupted a smaller weekend gathering at the statue, later saying they were members of the Proud Boys, a self-declared group of “Western Chauvinist­s.”

Cornwallis, as governor of Nova Scotia, founded Halifax in 1749 and soon after issued a bounty on Mi’kmaq scalps in response to an attack on colonists.

Some members of the Mi’kmaq community have called for the removal of tributes to Cornwallis, calling his actions a form of genocide.

 ?? THE CANADIAN PRESS ?? People attend a rally in Halifax’s Cornwallis Park to show solidarity with Charlottes­ville after a protest staged by white supremacis­t groups sparked a counter protest and the weekend erupted in violence that left one person dead.
THE CANADIAN PRESS People attend a rally in Halifax’s Cornwallis Park to show solidarity with Charlottes­ville after a protest staged by white supremacis­t groups sparked a counter protest and the weekend erupted in violence that left one person dead.

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