Toronto Star

Black protests have benefited people beyond Black communitie­s Yet anti-Black pushback persists in Canada

Defiant, daring and public resistance has led to significan­t legal and social reforms that made the country better for all

- ANTHONY MORGAN Anthony N. Morgan is a Toronto-based human rights lawyer, policy consultant and community educator. Twitter: @AnthonyNMo­rgan

Over-policed and under-protected. That’s the painful paradox of being Black in Canada.

That’s why Black protest is not just imperative for Black survival in Canada, but a precursor to Black successes that have benefited folks beyond Black communitie­s. Defiant, daring and public resistance of Black people in Canada has led to many of the most significan­t legal and social reforms that have shaped

Canada for the better.

It was the Black-led civil-disobedien­ce campaign of restaurant sit-ins by Bromley Armstrong, Ruth Lor, and Hugh Burnett in Dresden, Ont., that caused this province to outlaw segregatio­n in commercial and residentia­l establishm­ents with the passing of the1954 Fair Accommodat­ion Practices Act. This campaign was instrument­al in inspiring the establishm­ent of Ontario’s Human Rights Commission in1962, leading other provinces to establish the same. Relatedly, while many Canadians beam at the fact that a Black woman, Viola Desmond, is on our $10 bill, few remember that her stand against segregatio­n in Nova Scotia in 1946 was illegal and led her to be violently arrested, detained and jailed.

Canada now celebrates having one of the western world’s most progressiv­e immigratio­n and refugee systems, seeing it as a bedrock for the flourishin­g of a national policy and social ethic of multicultu­ralism. But Canadians forget that it was hundreds of Black Caribbean immigrants, many of whom were train porters, domestic servants and mine workers, who in the 1960s led public demonstrat­ions and lobbied Canadian government officials to eventually get our country to significan­tly reduce the racist provisions that were meant to make and

maintain this stolen Indigenous land as a “white man’s country.”

While now outdated and overdue for reform, Ontario’s current policing and police oversight laws, including the establishm­ent of the Special Investigat­ions Unit, were also born directly out of Black protest against recurring killings with impunity of Black people by white police officers. These protests were largely driven by fierce and fearless advocacy of the Black Action Defence Committee, commonly regarded as the Black Lives Matter-Toronto of the late 1980s through to the early 2000s. The same point can be made about pivotal human-rights advances that have been made in education, sports, child welfare, health care and housing. Within these and other sectors, large and small Black protests beat the path for social reforms that have benefited all people.

And yet still, Black folks remain overpolice­d and under-protected by these very same institutio­ns we helped make better. Over-policed and under-protected by the very same non-Black communitie­s that have directly benefited from having fairer schools, more equitable and representa­tive workplaces, less aggressive­ly invasive child-welfare societies, and somewhat less racist and more accountabl­e policing systems.

Because of historical­ly ardent and ongoing Black protest, Canadians enjoy a standard of human rights and level of inclusion, equity and diversity that would likely be substantia­lly more deficient than they currently are if those protests never occurred. The irony is that this same social standard of wellbeing that formed out of Black struggle is used to delegitimi­ze continued expression­s of Black protest.

Whether it’s Black Lives Matter activists pouring pink paint on monuments to purveyors of Indigenous genocide and anti-Black racism, or Black parents protesting stubbornly systemic antiBlack racism at the Peel Board of Education, or Black employees in provincial public service literally and figurative­ly being sick of having to be twice as good to get half as far as non-Black counterpar­ts, anti-Black pushback persists. This pushback is always a slap in the face to Black communitie­s. It is a reminder that Canadians too easily forget that much of our country’s progress has been spurred by protests emanating from Black pain and suffering. If this fact was truly recognized and respected in our country, there would be no need for a Black Lives Matter movement in Canada.

Canadians seem to only want the fruit of Canada’s progressiv­e successes without appreciati­ng the Black struggle, suffering and sacrifices at the root of many of them.

But the tradition of Black people in Canada has never forgotten that “If there is no struggle there is no progress” as once said by Frederick Douglass. And so with Aug. 1 and Emancipati­on Day arriving, to support and inspire continued Black freedom fighting in Canada, I leave these words from a poem from one of Canada’s greatest civil rights lawyers, the late Charles Roach: Struggle to be free Stand fast for your right To equal liberty Live a life of sharing Our mission is to serve For when we stand up for our rights We bring freedom to the world

 ?? VINCE TALOTTA TORONTO STAR ?? Canadians often forget much of our country’s progress has been spurred by protests emanating from Black suffering, Anthony Morgan writes.
VINCE TALOTTA TORONTO STAR Canadians often forget much of our country’s progress has been spurred by protests emanating from Black suffering, Anthony Morgan writes.

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