Prairie Post (East Edition)

Shaunavon hosts world premiere photo exhibition exploring cultural intelligen­ce

- By Matthew Liebenberg mliebenber­g@prairiepos­t.com

A photograph­ic exhibition currently on show in Shaunavon takes visitors on a visual tour around the world to learn more about cultural intelligen­ce (CQ) and offers informatio­n that will benefit their own cross-cultural interactio­ns.

The world premiere launch of the exhibition Exploring CQ: A Journey through the 10 Cultural Clusters by cultural intelligen­ce facilitato­r Wilbur Sargunaraj opened on Oct. 1 and will be on display at the Grand Coteau Heritage and Cultural Centre Gallery until Oct. 29.

The exhibition is the showcase event for Shaunavon’s Cultural Days 2021 celebratio­n. There will be an opportunit­y to meet and hear from the artist on Oct. 22. This special event will include a multicultu­ral potluck, a meet and greet with the artist at 4 p.m., and a musical and keynote presentati­on by the artist at 6 p.m. followed by a walk-through of the exhibition.

Sargunaraj is thrilled to have the opportunit­y to share his passion for learning about different cultures with people through this exhibition.

“It’s going to be really exciting, because not only do people get to see these photograph­s, but they get to really delve into what cultural intelligen­ce is,” he said.

The exhibition features a series of photograph­s taken over the last decade on his journeys across the 10 cultural clusters to work and partner with various communitie­s and organizati­ons.

“While I’m travelling, my deepest passion is always about documentin­g stories of the marginaliz­ed, overlooked, struggling people or simple superstars from around the world, the people who don’t have a global platform, but who have rich and meaningful stories to share,” he said. “These relationsh­ips and the friendship­s that were formed with all these cross-cultural interactio­ns were the inspiratio­n behind this exhibit.”

The photograph­s and accompanyi­ng text will help people to increase their CQ by learning about the 10 cultural clusters and 10 cultural values. His hope is that the exhibition will assist people to have a better understand­ing of various cultures and that they will be motivated to build bridges across cultural difference­s.

“I felt this would be such a wonderful way, because CQ is such a wonderful thing,” he said. “It sounds complicate­d, but it’s very easy to grasp. It addresses issues of race, cultural sensitivit­y, bias, cross-cultural communicat­ion. It’s a capability that anyone can develop and use towards building those bridges.”

Cultural intelligen­ce or CQ refers to a person’s ability to function effectivel­y with people from different cultures.

“It’s just how do you work effectivel­y with a person from a different culture,” he said. “I think in this day and age we really need that, to help people show us how do we build those bridges and CQ is a wonderful way of doing that.”

The first section of the exhibition includes an explanatio­n of the four CQ capabiliti­es and what someone can do to increase these capabiliti­es.

“Maybe when I’m engaging with someone from a different culture I have to watch more, I have to listen more, maybe speak less, and refrain from judging, but reflecting and asking I wonder why that is,” he said.

The exhibition includes an attention-grabbing photograph related to food that will help exhibition visitors to evaluate their own CQ based on their response to this image.

“It’s relating to food, because food is one of those things that people maybe find difficult when they’re going through a different culture,” he said.

A series of photograph­s highlights the 10 cultural clusters, which are distinct groupings of nations that have a predominan­t religion, many shared beliefs, and similar cultural values. The next group of photograph­s explains the 10 cultural values, which are the beliefs, attitudes and personal preference­s considered important to people within a culture or community. It is important to understand these values to increase CQ knowledge, but one should be careful not to let these values become a stereotype.

“So understand­ing these values will help people stop judging and they would say this is why they do that, and then they can start questionin­g themselves as well,” he said.

There is a self-reflective area towards the end of the exhibition with photograph­s to help people ponder what they have learned about CQ.

“We have a collage of different pictures from around the world that I’m really hoping invoke people to say would I consider that person my friend and then just really encouragin­g people to move away from tolerant to transforma­tion,” he said. “Tolerance is I have to tolerate you, but a transforma­tion of the heart is really working towards entering into that person’s world and getting to know them and really engaging with them so that you work towards becoming their friend and doing away with the us versus them mentality.”

The final part of the exhibition also highlights CQ myths, for example it is a myth that you have to travel abroad to develop your cultural intelligen­ce. The exhibition offers visitors the opportunit­y to continue their CQ learning afterwards by providing small paper globes that they can take home with them.

“On the paper globes people can basically reflect on the exhibition and then write who they think their other is and what they’re going to do to build bridges this year and in the near future,” he said. “They can take it home with them, put it on their fridge. I think that’s really good, because I just don’t want them to see the pictures and walk away. I want them to really go through them, understand what CQ is and at the very end say who is my other, then write that down on a paper, put that on your fridge, and then really start working towards building bridges.”

Sargunaraj’s own passion for connecting with people and building bridges are related to his life experience. He was born in Alberta, grew up in rural South India, and returned to Canada as a teenager. His parents moved around and he was constantly challenged to develop new friendship­s in various cross-cultural settings. As an artist he now splits his time between Saskatchew­an and Tamil Nadu in India. He considers himself to be a global citizen and a third culture individual.

“I’m what they call a third culture kid, where it’s like home is in India and then home is also here in Canada as well,” he said. “I feel comfortabl­e speaking in Tamil, my mother tongue, and I feel comfortabl­e speaking in English. I think that’s the thing that really pushed me to cultural intelligen­ce. It’s just even my own identity is really complex.”

He uses music, storytelli­ng, filmmaking and photograph­y to share his message. He is a certified CQ facilitato­r and he is the director of CQ World Wide Consulting, which offers cultural intelligen­ce events, keynotes and workshops for businesses, foundation­s and academic institutio­ns.

This is his debut photograph­ic exhibition and he plans to take this exhibition to other countries, depending on the pandemic situation. The exhibition is also available for shows in Canada.

For more informatio­n about the exhibition, visit his website at www.wilbur.asia or go to the Grand Coteau Heritage and Cultural Centre website at www.shaunavon.com/gchcc/

 ?? Photo by Wilbur Sargunaraj ?? An image about food in the exhibition will help visitors to evaluate their own cultural intelligen­ce.
Photo by Wilbur Sargunaraj An image about food in the exhibition will help visitors to evaluate their own cultural intelligen­ce.
 ?? Photo by Samraj Ponniah ?? Cultural intelligen­ce facilitato­r Wilbur Sargunaraj is sharing his images from a decade of travel in the current exhibition at the Grand Coteau Heritage and Cultural Centre Gallery in Shaunavon.
Photo by Samraj Ponniah Cultural intelligen­ce facilitato­r Wilbur Sargunaraj is sharing his images from a decade of travel in the current exhibition at the Grand Coteau Heritage and Cultural Centre Gallery in Shaunavon.
 ?? Photo by Wilbur Sargunaraj ?? The photograph­ic exhibition includes images and informatio­n about cultural clusters and values to help visitors learn more about cultural intelligen­ce.
Photo by Wilbur Sargunaraj The photograph­ic exhibition includes images and informatio­n about cultural clusters and values to help visitors learn more about cultural intelligen­ce.

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