Friday 12 January 2018

Former City Councillor and a Filmmaker Appointed to the Order of Canada


By Neil Armstrong

Bev Salmon with her son, Warren, and grandson, Shakarri at a New Year's Day event organized by former Member of Parliament, Jean Augustine, on Jan. 1, 2018.

Two well-known Black Canadians have been appointed to the Order of Canada.

Former Toronto city councillor, Beverley “Bev” Salmon, and executive television producer and Olympian, Sylvia Sweeney, are among the 125 new appointments to the Order of Canada announced by Julie Payette, Governor General of Canada, on December 29.

The new member list includes 4 Companions (C.C.), 35 Officers (O.C.) and 86 Members (C.M.). Recipients will be invited to accept their insignia at a ceremony to be held at a later date.

The citation notes that Beverley Noel Salmon, C.M., O.Ont. Toronto, Ontario has been appointed “for her exemplary service to the City of Toronto, notably as an advocate for the educational and social well-being of Black communities.”

Sylvia Sweeney, C.M. Toronto, Ontario was appointed “for her long-standing commitment to and creative leadership at the nexus of art and sport through her documentaries and world-stage productions.”

Salmon served for twelve years as an elected politician in Toronto, first for North York Centre South, and then as a metro councillor. She was known for her hard work, fearless advocacy and high principles.
 
Salmon was Toronto’s first black female councillor and the Ontario Human Rights Commission’s first black female commissioner.

“It’s really such a big honour and it’s like an accumulation of the things I’ve done over the decades. I guess people in my local community thought that was a big piece of why I got it. It wasn’t really much emphasis on that,” says Salmon about her appointment to the Order of Canada.

She says her passion, whether while in politics or outside of it, was to improve the education system to make sure there was more inclusivity in all aspects of the curriculum.

Salmon’s says there is still a need for the contributions of Black Canadians to be an integral part of Canada’s history, not set aside to a month of recognition.

Born Beverley Bell, the daughter of a Jamaican father, Herbert McLean Bell, who had come to Canada to join up for the First World War, she trained at Wellesley Hospital and the University of Toronto’s Nursing School where she graduated with the award for the “most outstanding nurse.” Her mother was a fifth generation Canadian of Scottish/Irish descent.

Beverley later married Dr. John Douglas Salmon, Toronto-born of Jamaican parents, who became the first black surgeon in Canada.

“I want to see things improve for the next generation and it’s a sadness when I go to meetings with the young people and they’re saying some of the same issues that we’ve been concerned about since the 60s and the 70s – the way the police treat black people, it’s the unfairness,” she said about what inspires her advocacy.

Having lived in Detroit around 1960, she said it was a big eye-opener as she got to hear the civil rights leaders and saw what was happening in the community with policing and the education system.

It was through raising her own children that she realized that things needed to be improved.

She was a founding member of the Urban Alliance on Race Relations and a member of the National Action Committee on the Status of Women.

She also served as a member of the Metro Toronto Region Conservation Authority, president of the Glenorchy Residents Association, a founder of the Black Heritage Program, a fundraiser for the North York Symphony Orchestra, and an organizer and chair of Canada’s first conference on the triple jeopardy faced by women of colour.

Salmon was also the chair of the Metro Anti-Racism, Access and Equity Committee and co-chair of the Black Educators Group.

Her colleagues describe her as someone who has a genuine concern for the most vulnerable and is committed to the disadvantaged.

Salmon was invested into the Order of Ontario on June 28, 2017 for her work as an anti-racism and community activist.

She has received several awards including an honorary doctorate from Ryerson University, Harry Jerome Award, African-Canadian Achievement Award, Bicentennial Award from the province of Ontario, and outstanding achievement from the Association of Black Women.

Salmon says she sees really wonderful leadership emerging in the young people who are much more savvy than she would have been at their young ages.

“There’s really good leadership coming up. I feel good about that,” she says noting that if her being the recipient of the Order of Ontario and Order of Canada is an inspiration to them then she feels that’s the best benefit of getting such an honour.

Four years ago, Salmon and her siblings visited their father’s birthplace, Highgate in St. Mary, Jamaica and planted a tree.

Prior to that they would each visit on their own but this was their first visit together and since then Salmon has lost two of her brothers.

Her father was attending school in Boston and came on his own to join the Canadian army in 1918 and he never returned to live in Jamaica.

Sweeney is the daughter of music teacher, Daisy Sweeney, and railway cook, James Sweeney, and the niece of jazz musician, Oscar Peterson.

She was a key member of the Canadian women’s basketball team at the 1976 and 1984 Olympic Summer Games, and went on to have a successful career as a television journalist and documentary producer.

She produced and directed In the Key of Oscar (1992), a Gemini Award-winning National Film Board documentary about her famous uncle, and has been inducted into the Canadian Basketball Hall of Fame and the Canadian Olympic Hall of Fame.

“It is truly an honour to be recognized in this way. With the passing of my mother recently so much of what she did lives on through what we do. As she would say this honour is not so much a sign of what I've done but a reminder of what I have left to do,” says Sweeney about the appointment.
Created in 1967, the Order of Canada, one of our country’s highest civilian honours, recognizes outstanding achievement, dedication to the community and service to the nation. 

Appointments are made by the governor general on the recommendation of the Advisory Council for the Order of Canada.

[This story has been published in the North American Weekly Gleaner, Jan. 11-17, 2018 issue.]

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