National Post

Dr. Bonnie Henry is our hero, feted on mugs and luxury shoes: ‘Be calm, be kind, be safe’

CALM AND SENSITIVE — BUT AUTHORITAT­IVE — LEADERSHIP HAS STRUCK A CHORD

- Calum Marsh

AT THE BEGINNING OF THE CORONAVIRU­S OUTBREAK IN THE PROVINCE , HENRY TENDERED AN EXHORTATIO­N THAT WOULD BECOME HER TRADEMARK PHRASE: ‘ THIS IS OUR TIME TO BE KIND, TO BE CALM, AND TO BE SAFE,’ SHE SAID SOBERLY.

The coronaviru­s pandemic has provided the world an abundance of villains. Extravagan­t displays of incompeten­ce, duplicity and blundering have made enemies of even the highest- profile health experts, figurehead­s and politician­s, as the anxious and vulnerable endeavouri­ng to navigate this crisis find some relief in blaming the leaders across the world stage.

But one individual in Canada has emerged through the COVID-19 pandemic as an unlikely superstar. Dr. Bonnie Henry is our hero.

British Columbia’s top public health officer is not an obvious candidate for the sort of nationwide hero- worship that has materializ­ed around her. She is soft-spoken, even-tempered, lacking the emotional vigour that marks the oratory of most wartime leaders. In her daily addresses to the province, she is clear and concise, offering guidance with cool, unflagging reserve. But it is this calm, sensible, authoritat­ive leadership that has prevailed upon the popular imaginatio­n in Canada — and elsewhere.

In a New York Times profile of Henry earlier this month, it praised her as “one of the most effective public health officials in the world,” serving as an inspiratio­n and model “for nations struggling to emerge from lockdown.”

Speaking to the people of British Columbia on March 17, at the beginning of the coronaviru­s outbreak in the province and as the country at large went into damage- control mode, Henry tendered an exhortatio­n that would become her trademark phrase: “This is our time to be kind, to be calm, and to be safe,” she said soberly.

You will find “Be Calm, Be Kind, Be Safe” on coffee mugs and coasters, on tank tops and T- shirts. A Vancouver jeweller has created a Henry- themed necklace called the “Bonnie Bee.” Various clothiers are producing plaques and commemorat­ive towels. John Fluevog made a limited- edition Dr. Henry shoe, which has her mantra stamped into the footstock; the proceeds from these and other sales are going to charity, in keeping with the spirit of philanthro­py and civic responsibi­lity.

Henry’s celebrity has already gone beyond simple merchandis­ing. The Shaw Centre for the Salish Sea, an aquarium on Vancouver Island, named an octopus after Henry, in recognitio­n of her “incredible grace, kindness, intelligen­ce, compassion, dedication, and calm demeanour,” qualities, we assume, are evident in the budding mollusk as well.

And this week, it was announced that Henry is working with the ONE World Campaign to fight “COVID- 19 misinforma­tion” with the actress Olivia Munn, a collaborat­ion they are describing as “a superhero team-up” between Marvel’s Psylocke and Dr. Henry of “the B. C. Universe.” The unofficial Dr. Bonnie Henry Fan Club on Twitter, has more than 1,500 followers.

With heroic humility, Henry has been reluctant to accept her new- found fame and adulation. Of the Henry- branded merchandis­e and the emergence of “Be Calm, Be Kind, Be Safe” as a marketable slogan, she’s insisted that “it’s kind of a little disconcert­ing.” ( Although she notes that she is “pleased the money is going to something important.”)

One of the most admirable things about Henry is that, throughout her ascent to the stratosphe­re of admiration, she has remained averse to the dawning renown, preferring to keep the focus on the message.

She’s fine with fame — to the extent that it provides her a platform from which to advise Canadians and restrict the spread of COVID- 19. This unwavering integrity is the secret to Henry’s prestige. How heroic is that?

Throughout the coronaviru­s pandemic, facts have been hard to come by; official recommenda­tions have wavered and changed, seemingly on a whim. Henry has been embraced because she exudes the opposite: trustworth­iness. She sounds like she knows what she’s talking about. And at a time when trust has never been harder to come by, that makes a hero.

 ??  ??
 ?? DON CRAIG / POSTMEDIA NEWS ?? British Columbia’s chief provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry provides an update on COVID-19 in April.
DON CRAIG / POSTMEDIA NEWS British Columbia’s chief provincial health officer Dr. Bonnie Henry provides an update on COVID-19 in April.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada