Saturday, 13 February 2021

Boonoonoonos Brunch Celebrates 21st Anniversary

By Neil Armstrong
Photo contributed     Dr. Upton Allen,  Head of the Division of Infectious Diseases, The Hospital for Sick Chidren (SickKids)
 

An idea that started as a fundraising event at the Jamaican Canadian Association and has become a staple is celebrating its 2ist anniversary this month. 

Erma Collins, a veteran member of the JCA and former chair of its Capital Fundraising Committee in the late 1990s, early 2000s, notes that the Boonoonoonos Brunch was the brainchild of an ad hoc group established by the board, under the leadership of then president, Herman Stewart. 

The organization had recently acquired 995 Arrow Road and “the committee’s mandate was to go beyond JCA members, to corporations and other individuals, to raise moneys towards our “Building to Serve” funds,” writes Collins in an article about the history of the brunch.

At the time, the committee members were Erma Collins, Paul Barnett, Vincent Conville, Dr. Buddy McIntosh, Dr. Ezra Nesbeth, Lana Salmon-Jones, Herman Stewart, Sandra Whiting, and Patricia Williams. 

The idea for a Celebrity Brunch to take place during Black History Month got its catchy name ‘Boonoonoonos’ from Whiting who suggested it to the group.

 “I have always felt that we have such fantastic names in our language and I love ‘boonoonoonos’ because it’s joyful and it’s happy and it’s bright. It just says possibilities so that was why I thought it would be good, says Whiting on the telephone one week before she hosts the virtual event on February 21, 2021. 

This year, three people – Dr. Upton Allen, Letna Allen-Rowe and the late Denise Jones -- will be recognized for their outstanding contribution to the community. 

Dr. Allen is the Head of Division of Infectious Diseases at SickKids Hospital, a professor at the University of Toronto and sits on numerous health–related committees. He has a long history of contributions to the African Canadian and wider community. 

Dr. Allen is currently the lead for a team of researchers that are conducting large-scale antibody testing and data collection to understand the prevalence of COVID-19 infection in Black Canadian communities. He is also a member of The Black Scientists' Task Force on Vaccine Equity that was recently created to address vaccine hesitancy among Black people of African and Caribbean origins.

 
Photo contributed    Letna Allen-Rowe, Artist and Community Advocate

Allen-Rowe is a performing artist and community advocate who is passionate about diversity, equity and inclusion. 

She established the “Ms Letna Healing Hope Fundraising Brunch’’ in 2013 after she received treatment for breast cancer at Scarborough’s Centenary Hospital. Over the years, the brunch has raised more than $50,000, which was donated to cancer care in Canada and the Caribbean. 

Allen-Rowe is the recipient of several awards, including Leading Women – Building Communities Award from the Province of Ontario, the 100 ABC Women Award and on August 6, 2020, Independence day, she was appointed to the Order of Distinction (O.D) by the Government of Jamaica “for outstanding service to the Jamaican Diaspora in Canada.” 

“The late Denise Jones was a vital force in the Jamaican-Canadian community. Denise was a dynamic music promoter, artist, actress, cultural archivist, educator, booking agent, storyteller, philanthropist, and promoter of all things Jamaican,” says the Boonoonoonos Brunch Planning Committee. 

“She was an iconic figure in the Jamaican Canadian community, the world of reggae and the Black entertainment scene, producing and promoting many top artists. The JCA Boonoononos Bruch was one of the beneficiaries of Denise’s event planning and execution expertise. Well known as the organizer of the Air Jamaica Day and later Jambana Music Festival, Denise’s contribution to the community was recognized by the Ontario Legislature and the Government of Canada after her death.”

 
Photo contributed   Denise Jones, The late Founder and CEO of Jones & Jones Productions Ltd.

In her recount of the first Celebrity Brunch, popularly known as the Boonoonoonos Brunch, Collins says, “We defined “celebrity” as those among us who had excelled in different fields like medicine, law, engineering, media, finance, education, entrepreneurship, politics, technology, arts & entertainment, sports, hospitality, labour, human resource management, and so on.

 “We decided to have a celebrity at every table. There would be minimal if any entertainment. We wanted people to interact with the celebrity and with one another. There would be Black History quizzes; people would be asked to make up limericks, to sing songs, to have fun—all facilitated by the celebrity.” 

The inaugural Boonoonoonos Brunch and Brawta was held on February 20, 2000, and as Collins notes it was a knockout affair with 47 celebrity hosts in attendance. The patron was the late Lincoln Alexander and former Canadian citizenship judge Stanley Grizzle said grace. 

Collins writes that: “MC Sandra Whiting did an excellent job getting celebrities to lead their tables in singing songs from assigned themes; to answer items from the quiz (prepared by Vincent Conville); to expand one or two given lines into a limerick (prepared by Erma Collins); and to pay whatever amount of money she decided, whenever she decided that the job was not up to par or was too well done. People left with wide grins on their faces and with the request that JCA “do it again next year.” 

The event netted $11,052, with the help of various sponsors from the community. In 2001, the committee repeated the brunch and had Lincoln Alexander and the late Beverly Mascoll as patrons. 

In her recollection, Collins notes that, “A celebrity that year, Raynier Maharaj of The Caribbean Camera, wrote: “If you missed the fundraising Boonoonoonos Brunch and Brawta, you missed out. It was a grand time, with celebrities at every table where, betwixt and between nibbling on delicacies like curried goat and green fig, we had to get the folks to do something outrageous…..The real star was Pride’s Van Cooten, who got up on the stage to render us all speechless with a beautiful song.”” 

Being one the longest standing Black community organizations in the GTA, the JCA says it is important to participate in Black History Month activities, providing “an opportunity to celebrate the many achievements and contributions of Black Canadians and to recognize the past and present contributions in such areas as education, medicine, art, culture, public service, economic development, politics and human rights."

 The Jamaican Canadian Association delivers programs and services and advocates to improve the well-being and equity of Jamaican, Caribbean and African-Canadians within the Greater Toronto Area.

 It is also a physical hub for the provision and hosting of various cultural, educational and social activities. The annual brunch in recognition and celebration of Black History Month is one such activity. 

Collins notes that the Boonoonoonos Brunch has also been produced by Jones and Jones, as well as by Sandra Whiting and Associates, and “has morphed from an interactive event to an entertainment-based one. But it has endured.” 

The glossary in Jamaica Labrish: Jamaica Dialect Poems by Louise Bennett with notes and introduction by Rex Nettleford defines “boonoonoonos” as a “term of endearment meaning pretty, beautiful; also pleasant, lovely, nice.”



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