Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - January 23, 2015, Winnipeg, Manitoba
C M Y K PAGE A4
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A T the risk of sounding glib, you'd have to
walk around Winnipeg with your eyes covered
in hockey tape and your ears filled with
molasses not to notice this
city's racism problem.
Winnipeg is Canada's most indigenous
city, both in terms of the sheer
number of First Nations, M�tis and
Inuit residents ( about 80,000) and the
proportion of the population that is
indigenous ( about one in nine).
This should be nothing but a source
of pride. Unfortunately, the quality- of- life gap between
indigenous and non- indigenous Winnipeggers is both
immense and unconscionable, no matter what metric
you choose to examine.
Indigenous residents are far more likely to be wards of
the state during childhood, victims of violence in adulthood,
live in inadequate housing, fail to graduate high
school, wind up incarcerated, suffer from chronic mental-
and physical- health ailments and make less money,
compared with non- indigenous Winnipeggers.
This can be described as systemic racism. But there's also so much
overt racism directed toward indigenous Winnipeggers, it's fair to say
this ethnic group suffers uniquely from discrimination.
The vast majority of Winnipeggers know this and understand this.
And in 2014, as a community, we were galvanized by a series of events
that included the slaying of teenager Tina Fontaine, the drowning
death of " homeless hero" Faron Hall, the inquest into the hospital- waiting-
room death of Brian Sinclair and the attempted slaying of teenager
Rinelle Harper.
As a result, there was and remains a palpable sense Winnipeggers
of all backgrounds are more
aware than ever about our ethnic
chasm, if not actively engaged in
bridging that divide.
That's why the publication of a
Maclean's story declaring Winnipeg
the most racist of Canadian
cities wasn't met with anger or
denial by Mayor Brian Bowman,
the city's first indigenous mayor.
" Is there racism in Winnipeg?
Yes," said Bowman, who gathered
several dozen city councillors,
city directors, educators, indigenous
leaders and other activists at
his office Thursday in an attempt
to show Winnipeg is serious about
addressing its ethnic divisions.
" You can't run away from
facts," said the mayor, who was
moved to tears when he said he
hopes his sons will be as proud of his M�tis heritage as they will be of
his wife's Ukrainian roots.
Bowman's response to the Maclean's story seemed to surprise the
magazine's staff, who were attempting to be provocative with a cover
story proclaiming Winnipeg as Canada's most racist.
When Maclean's dubbed Quebec the most corrupt province, the
entire island of Montreal practically revolved in protest. But here was
Winnipeg's mayor, essentially saying: Yeah, well, tell us something we
don't know.
The thorough story, written by former Winnipegger Nancy Macdonald,
accurately depicts the scale of systemic and overt racism in Winnipeg.
( I was interviewed for the piece and I'm quoted in it.)
Only some of the story's superlatives can be called into question:
One could argue Vancouver is just as racist against its Asian residents,
for example. How Winnipeg gets to be worse than any other city is
debatable.
The fact indigenous Winnipeggers live shorter lives and are subject
to more violence than other Winnipeggers is not, however, up for
debate. The presence of a unique and unmistakable race- relations
problem in Winnipeg can only be disputed by a citizen in denial.
The challenge is what this city and this mayor are going to do about
a situation with settlement- era roots. Mayor Bowman and police Chief
Devon Clunis cannot wave a post- colonial wand and heal a city.
In Alberta or Ontario, the Maclean's story may read like a shocker.
But its effect was relatively muted in Winnipeg by mere virtue of it being
published months after Fontaine's death, the release of the Sinclair
inquest report and the attack on Harper, all of which led Winnipeg's
great divide to become a top- of- mind headline grabber.
There is something slightly patronizing about a Toronto publication
presuming to tell Winnipeg something about itself. There's also
something cringe- inducing about a mayor calling a news conference to
address a national publication covering many of the same issues Winnipeg
media have already covered.
Nonetheless, Maclean's has done Winnipeg a service by drawing
attention to a socio- economic situation of national significance.
Winnipeg stories are no longer told in great detail on a national level.
One could argue the magazine also ought to draw national attention
to the city's real estate and construction scandals, whose severity
exceeds those in Toronto and approaches the ones in Montreal.
But there is no hierarchy of municipal embarrassments. And Winnipeg
need not be embarrassed.
As long as residents of this city continue to get to
know each other - openly, in good faith and in
the spirit of reconciliation - the racism we
speak of now will seem quaint and exotic
within a generation.
bartley. kives@ freepress. mb. ca
W ILLIS Petti was standing inside
a teepee at The Forks Thursday
when he was asked about a Maclean's
magazine article branding Winnipeg
as a city that displayed " racism at its
worst."
He shrugged.
Petti is 39, of Dene Nation descent, and
it's not like he was hearing a breakingnews
flash.
" I wasn't surprised, actually," he said.
" It's been boiling under the surface for a
long time. Personal experience, seen and
heard."
Petti was born and raised in Winnipeg.
He's noticed security guards following
him at stores, people crossing the street in
front of him.
" Little things," he said.
" I don't let it bother me too much," Petti
said. " I can handle it. I'm more concerned
with my kids."
Petti was standing in the teepee with
four- year- old son, Cassius, the youngest
of his four children. His family lives in La
Salle, but plans to move to Winnipeg this
summer.
" I question whether that's a smart thing
now," he said. " They've lived a pretty sheltered
life so far."
Petti wasn't angry, sad or shocked.
Neither were most Winnipeggers interviewed
about the Maclean's cover story
titled, Welcome to Winnipeg, where Canada's
racism problem is at its worst .
But the " most racist?" The " ugliest?"
Consensus varied on that.
" That's a little harsh," said Liv Gardiner,
a 15- year- old Vincent Massey Collegiate
student who was making her first
trip to the Canadian Museum for Human
Rights. " I definitely think there are
racists, but there are racists in every city.
I don't think a specific city can be named
the most racist.
" It's not just Winnipeg. It's all of Canada
and the States."
Both Liv and her classmate, Madeleine
Dupuis, 15, were equally impressed by the
response of Mayor Brian Bowman, who
held a news conference Thursday to say:
" We can either kill the messenger or respond."
" Then we're accepting the mistake and
trying to fix the problem," Dupuis said.
Added Gardiner: " It's good he ( Bowman)
didn't get defensive. That would
have looked bad on Winnipeg."
Jody and Bruce Miles, a retired couple
also visiting the CMHR, disagreed with
the assertion Winnipeg is " the ugliest."
" I can say there's discrimination, but
not the most discrimination," Bruce said.
" Maybe it's a matter of proportion, too."
Winnipeg has the highest proportion of
aboriginals of any major Canadian city.
Others were skeptical of a magazine applying
" most racist" without much in the
way of specific statistics.
" That's a good headline- grabber," offered
Mark Roche. " That's good for
sales."
" I think it sells magazines," said Marina
McCaffray, a retired school teacher.
Regardless of official or unofficial rankings,
the existence
of racism in
Winnipeg,
and
the need to end it, was not in dispute.
" I'm sure there are problems everywhere,"
said Susanne Gomez, who recently
earned her master's degree in sciences
at the University of Winnipeg. " Whether
we are the worst or not, everyone needs to
contribute to solving these issues."
" Am I naive to think education isn't helpful?"
McCaffray asked. " Certainly it has
to change and we have to count on our
younger generation to fix the problem."
Petti might not have been surprised
by Maclean's ranking of Winnipeg. But
he didn't think it was entirely negative,
either.
" I think it's a good thing," he said. " I got
a message from ( an aboriginal) friend of
mine on Facebook today. He said people
were being a lot nicer to him today. Maybe
if we know more about what First Nations
people go through, it will help.
" Smile a little bit more. A smile
goes a long way."
randy. turner@
freepress. mb. ca
BARTLEY
KIVES
Is our city really the
' worst' in Canada?
Maclean's story gets people talking about the state of race relations
By Randy Turner
Yeah, well,
tell us something
we don't know
We've acknowledged racism here
PHIL HOSSACK / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Willis Petti, with his son, Cassius, says he isn't surprised the city was called the most racist in Canada. He's experienced it first- hand.
PHIL HOSSACK / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Teens Madeleine Dupuis ( left) and Liv Gardiner, who were visiting the human rights museum
Thursday, were impressed by Mayor Brian Bowman's response to the racist label.
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