Waterloo Region Record

Activists push for slavery discussion

- Adina Bresge

HALIFAX — African-Nova Scotian organizers say it’s time for a centuries-overdue discussion about Canada’s legacy of slavery, its lasting harms on black Canadians and potential forms of reparation.

“Canada is lagging behind (many countries) on the reparation­s issue because we haven’t had enough support from the government,” says Lynn Jones, who chairs the Nova Scotia chapter of the Global Afrikan Congress. “We’re having these conversati­ons around the province … and if the government were in tune, the government would be doing this.”

In the absence of a clear national commitment to address Canada’s role in the transatlan­tic slave trade, Jones says she was encouraged by a recent UN report recommendi­ng that the federal government apologize for slavery and consider issuing reparation­s.

Representa­tives for federal Heritage Minister Mélanie Joly, who is responsibl­e for the multicultu­ralism portfolio, did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment.

Isaac Saney, a historian who teaches black studies at Dalhousie University, says any meaningful dialogue about reparation­s must begin with an acknowledg­ment of what he calls the “original sin” of antiblack racism in Canada — the enslavemen­t of thousands of people of African descent between the 16th and 19th centuries.

“Slavery is the dead hand that has shaped a society,” says Saney. “Slavery no longer exists, but the processes … (that) put it into motion have continued in one form or another into the present.”

Slavery was abolished in the British colonies in the 1830s, but Saney says its legacy set the stage for later injustices against black Canadians — such as segregatio­n, anti-black immigratio­n policies and presentday social inequities — by establishi­ng a precedent for treating people of African descent as “non-citizens.”

This legacy has particular resonance for African-Nova Scotians, a “significan­t” portion of whom can trace their lineage back to slaves, Saney says. Jones sees Nova Scotia’s history as all the more reason why the province should lead the Canadian charge for slavery reparation­s.

While government drags its feet, Jones says, she has been working with other organizers and community members to brainstorm ideas for what reparation­s could look like in a Canadian context.

“At the centre, there needs to be an apology, because everything kind of leads from that,” she says.

Jones says the residual effects of slavery on African-Canadians have been far-reaching, and the government’s approach to redressing these harms should be just as comprehens­ive.

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