Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - February 25, 2014, Winnipeg, Manitoba
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A FTER years of focusing on fundraising
and construction, the
Canadian Museum
for Human Rights
has turned its focus to
its raison d'�tre - the
content.
After consulting with
focus groups, the museum
has named its 11
galleries and begun
their construction.
Angela Cassie, the
museum's director of communications
and external relations, said the galleries
need to be completed a number of
weeks before visitors come through
the doors for the first time on Sept. 20,
so staff and volunteers can be trained
properly.
" The objectives when naming a gallery,
knowing it's going to go on signage
and in visitor guides, is you want
people to have a sense of what they're
going to see and pique their curiosity.
You're trying to do that in five words
or less and in both official languages,"
she said.
The gallery names are:
. What are Human Rights?
. Indigenous Perspectives
. Canadian Journeys
. Protecting Rights in Canada
. Examining the Holocaust
. Turning Points for Humanity
. Breaking the Silence
. Actions Count
. Rights Today
. Inspiring Change
The first gallery at the $ 351- million
project will set the tone for the visitor
experience, Cassie said.
" We want people to recognize this is
a place where we're sharing complex
issues and sharing multiple perspectives.
We thought we'd start off with
a question and lay a foundation for
people's thinking of human rights concepts,"
Cassie said.
An 11th gallery, called Expressions,
will be changeable and set up with temporary
exhibits.
Cassie said these are the gallery
names for the foreseeable future as
even when the content is enriched for
each one, the names will still be relevant.
The structural steel is being put in
place now and museum staff are now
finalizing text, images and multimedia
that will be used in each gallery, Cassie
said.
One of the highlights will be a basketshaped
theatre where visitors can take
part in a 360- degree movie experience.
" This won't be your traditional movie
theatre," Cassie said.
The private- sector fundraising campaign
continues as the museum's construction
nears completion. Diane
Boyle, CEO of the Friends of the Canadian
Museum for Human Rights,
said it recently hit $ 142 million of its
$ 150- million goal.
" Our volunteers and staff across
Canada are meeting with prospective
donors. The campaign continues; it always
has. Ideally, it would be nice to
reach ( the target) by opening.
We're doing our strategy right now
( for) how and when we're going to
achieve the additional $ 8 million," she
said.
geoff. kirbyson@ freepress. mb. ca
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ABOUT THE
GALLERIES
CMHR announces themes of 11 galleries
By Geoff Kirbyson
PHIL HOSSACK / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS FILES
Among the features of the Canadian Museum for Human Rights will be a unique, circular movie theatre offering a 360- degree viewing experience.
A former refugee, a chemical- weapons
inspector and a human rights scholar
are among the first group of recipients
of the expanded University of Manitoba
Alumni Awards.
The awards recognize University of
Manitoba graduates who have achieved
outstanding accomplishments in their
professional and personal lives.
The award winners for 2014 are human
rights scholar and Nobel Peace
Prize nominee David Matas, indigenous
community leader Bruce Miller,
chemical- weapons inspector and Nobel
Peace Prize winner Scott Cairns, engineering
industry leader John Bockstael
and refugee- camp survivor and
philanthropist Chau Pham.
" Our university is proud to celebrate
these exceptional alumni," U of
M president and vice- chancellor David
Barnard said in a statement. " Each one
of them has achieved outstanding accomplishments
in their professional
and personal lives.
- staff
Bigger slate of U of M Alumni Award winners named
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