Ottawa Citizen

Institutio­nal anti-Black racism needs redress

- BRUCE DEACHMAN bdeachman@postmedia.com

In the coming weeks, candidates will be on your doorstep. It will be your chance to ask them what they plan to do about issues that matter to you.

We asked Ottawa residents what they would like local candidates to address. Today, we spoke to Osmel Guerra Maynes, executive director of Capital Pride.

Racism, and particular­ly anti-Black racism, in institutio­ns is an issue that Capital Pride executive director Osmel Guerra Maynes says needs to be addressed.

“There needs to be a solution for institutio­nal racism,” he says, “because we're seeing it a lot in our various communitie­s.”

Maynes, who now lives in Ottawa, but has also spent time in Toronto and Vancouver, says he sees institutio­nal racism every day.

“Anti-Black racism is in every corner of Canada. It's been ingrained in society for many, many years.

“We experience it when we go into a store or when we go to work — different types of micro-aggression­s put towards us. And we see it in how police interact with people of colour, especially Black folks.”

Maynes points to the May 2020 police murder of George Floyd in Minneapoli­s and subsequent momentum of the Black Lives Matter movement as a significan­t time when people came together to rally in support of Black people, but says it needs to go further.

“I want to see it actualized and spoken on. Conversati­ons need to happen within government officials and institutio­ns, and also community members, in terms of how we can better navigate this issue.

“Because we know this anti-Blackness continues to happen to folks who are simply minding their own business or just want to carry on with their lives.”

 ??  ?? Osmel Guerra Maynes
Osmel Guerra Maynes

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