By Neil Armstrong
Photo credit: York University Senator Wanda Elaine Thomas Bernard speaking at the launch of new programs and research in Black Studies at York University |
Senator Wanda Elaine Thomas Bernard, one of the two black independent members in the Senate of Canada, says the fact that York University now has a program of Black Studies,
which is pan-university in its approach, signals the significance and
importance of this work.
The senator, who was the first Black Canadian to have an
academic tenure position and become a full professor at Dalhousie University in
Halifax, Nova Scotia, said in the 40-plus years that she was a student in
university it is something that she “hoped for, worked and prayed for to have
Black Studies research, scholarship and teaching in Black Studies seriously
taken up by universities.”
She was speaking at the launch of -- the Black Canadian Studies
Certificate Program, Black Studies and Theories of Race and Racism Graduate
Stream, Black Child and Youth Studies Network, Network for the Advancement of
Black Communities, and the Jean Augustine, Inez Elliston, and Beverley Salmon
library fonds – at the university on October 18.
“To have our place in this country clearly identified by
what you’re doing here it’s a signal, it’s a signal to the rest of the
country,” Senator Bernard said, noting that she hopes that it also opens up
opportunities for faculty.
“We have far too many educated professionals in our
community, in the African Canadian community, who don’t have full time faculty
positions. PhD-credential people who don’t have full time positions – that
shouldn’t be, that shouldn’t be the case in this country. Programs like this
create more opportunities for faculty members who want to teach in this area.”
Rhonda Lenton, president and vice-chancellor, said she was
impressed by the uniqueness in many ways of what was being accomplished in the
programs, “in terms of elevating Black Studies to a pan-university approach,
not isolating Black Studies just in one particular department but really
bringing together faculties from across the whole university.”
“I was impressed by the responsiveness to the student
advocacy for having programs that reflected their lived experience, and so how
within that context and within Canada how can we reflect on historical, social,
cultural evidence and data within that context of Canada.”
Lenton said she was
also impressed by the way in which the programs are so embedded in the
community.
“The program to bring together multiple universities across
Ontario in creating a hub for research but there is such a strong commitment
there to working with the communities that we serve, to working with black
scholars, being responsive to our students, listening to those different groups
and bringing them together in these programs and really creating and…
reestablishing your work as a leader in the area of Black Studies,” she said.
Andrea Davis, a Jamaican and chair of the Department of
Humanities, thanked Leslie Sanders who has mentored, supervised and guided most
of them in the humanities, and who has worked in Black Studies, not only at York
but across Canada.
The Black Canadian Studies Certificate launched in September
and Davis said it is a seminal achievement but well overdue.
“It emerges from conversations and advocacy going back many
years to the creation of a Centre for the Study of Black Cultures in Canada,
co-founded by Leslie Sanders and Rinaldo Walcott in 2002.”
She said more recently student advocacy for a more diverse
curriculum “provided the context for us to re-energize this vision.”
Photo credit: York University Andrea Davis, Chair of the Department of Humanities, York University, left, and Christina Sharpe, Professor of African Diaspora Studies, Humanities, York University |
The Black Canadian Studies Certificate provides an
integrated examination of the historical, cultural and various expressive
productions of people of African descent in the Americas through the lens of
Black Canada and four specific humanities and fine arts approaches: cultural
studies, history, literature and music.
Davis said the certificate is currently limited to students
enrolled in degree programs at York and she has been getting many emails from
other people who are interested in enrolling.
“So we are already working to expand it to include both a
direct entry option and a major and minor.”
The Black Studies and Theories of Race and Racism Graduate
Stream, also launched in September, is meant to prepare students to develop
innovative scholarships that explores and analyzes the contributions of black
intellectual, political and cultural productions nationally and
internationally.
The Black Child and Youth Studies Network, led by the Jean
Augustine Chair in Education, Community and Diaspora, brings together faculty
and post-doctoral fellows from five Ontario universities: York, McMaster,
University of Toronto, University of Ottawa and University of Windsor.
It is supported by the Ministry of Universities, Colleges
and Training and the Ministry of Education.
The Network for the Advancement of Black Communities, also
housed in the Jean Augustine Chair, serves as a coordinating entity for
initiatives and programs providing services for children, youth and families.
Funded by the Ministry of Child and Youth Services, the
network coordinates and aligns programs and initiatives that address
disparities in graduation rates, postsecondary education participation and
youth employment.
In 2007, Jean Augustine donated her personal records to the
Clara Thomas Archives and Special Collections at York University chronicling
her four decades of public service and advocacy in women’s rights, urban
education and with black youth.
The library recently extended its special collections to
include the Inez Elliston and Beverley Salmon fonds.
“Together these five programs and initiatives signal York’s
importance as a leader in Black Canadian Studies, both in research
concentration and in the education of a new generation of scholars and
graduates who can respond thoughtfully and purposefully to the rapidly changing
world in which we live and ask critical questions to find bold solutions for
the social and political problems of our time.”
The keynote lecture entitled “Still Here” was presented by
Christina Sharpe, professor of African Diaspora Studies, Humanities at York
University.
[Correction: An earlier version of this story noted that Senator Bernard is now the only black senator in the Senate of Canada. Senator Marie-Francoise Megie of Quebec, who was born in Haiti, was appointed an independent member by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Nov. 2, 2016. I regret the error.
This story was published in the North American Weekly Gleaner, Nov. 1-7, 2018.]
[Correction: An earlier version of this story noted that Senator Bernard is now the only black senator in the Senate of Canada. Senator Marie-Francoise Megie of Quebec, who was born in Haiti, was appointed an independent member by Prime Minister Justin Trudeau on Nov. 2, 2016. I regret the error.
This story was published in the North American Weekly Gleaner, Nov. 1-7, 2018.]
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