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Boxing Champ pardoned 100-years later

June 5, 2018 by SouthEtobicokeNews

The first Black heavyweight boxing champ Jack Johnson loved white women and that lust led to his downfall more than 100 years ago in a racially-segregated U.S.

A strapping Johnson, who was known as the “Galveston Giant” in the ring, was born in 1878 to the son of slaves in Houston. He had strong ties to Canada and was a fugitive here while on the lam from U.S. police.

Canadian boxing champ Lennox Lewis, actor Sylvester Stallone and family members watched as President Donald Trump last month granted a posthumous pardon to Johnson some 105 years later at an event in the White House.

Johnson defeated Canadian World Heavyweight champ, Tommy Burns, for the title in 1908 at a time when Blacks and whites rarely entered the same ring. He then went on to beat a series of “great white hopes,” culminating in 1910 with a win over champion, James J. Jeffries.

The battle for racial supremacy between Johnson and Jeffries was billed a “Fight of the Century,” which at that time earned the Black fighter a hefty $65, 000. Johnson won the bout in the 15th round.

His victory angered many who wanted a “great white hope” to finish off the uppity Johnson. That night there were race riots in Texas, Colorado, New York City, Washington, D.C. and in more than 50 cities in 25 states.

At least 20 people were killed in the U.S. from the riots, and hundreds more were injured.

Blacks, on the other hand, were jubilant, and celebrated Johnson’s win as a victory for racial advancement. Many held spontaneous parades and gathered in prayer meetings.

Still, the U.S. federal authorities thought Johnson was becoming too big for his britches and placed him under investigation. They went after his weakest spot, which was for white women.

The boxer was envied by many whites and Blacks for earning considerable sums endorsing various products, including patent medicines. He had expensive hobbies as automobile racing and a penchant for tailored suits and purchasing jewelry and furs for his wives.

With his wealth, Johnson also purchased fine cars and opened a nightclub in Harlem in 1920; that would later become the Cotton Club. He also drank expensive champagne and owned exotic pets.

Johnson was convicted in 1913 of violating the Mann Act, a Jim Crow-era law that made it illegal to transport a white woman across state lines “for the purpose of prostitution or debauchery, or for any other immoral purpose.”

By then, his first wife, a white woman, had committed suicide. He took a second wife, Lucille Cameron, who was also white. Police managed to find a white prostitute who the boxer had an affair with who testified against him in 1913. An all-white jury took less than two hours to convict him.

District attorney Harry Parkin declared the conviction was a victory for the white race and the cause of anti-miscegenation.

“This Negro, in the eyes of many, has been persecuted,” Parkin bellowed. “Perhaps as an individual he was. But it was his misfortune to be the foremost example of the evil in permitting the intermarriage of whites and Blacks.”

Johnson skipped bail after the trial and fled to Montreal, posing as a member of a basketball team. For the next seven years he then traveled through Europe and South America before surrendering to U.S. police at the Mexican border in 1920.

He was sent to Leavenworth Penitentiary to serve his sentence and was released in July 1921.

Johnson died in a car crash in June 1946 as he was speeding away from a restaurant that had refused to serve him. He was 68.

His story is the basis of a play and 1970 movie The Great White Hope, starring James Earl Jones as Johnson. He was inducted into the Boxing Hall of Fame in 1954 and a film of the 1910 Johnson-Jeffries fight is deemed “historically significant” and kept in the U.S. National Film Registry.

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Filed Under: Uncategorized

Dr. Head stood for civil rights and justice

May 21, 2018 by SouthEtobicokeNews

The late Dr. Wilson Head was the son of a Georgia sharecropper and not one to walk away from a fight for civil rights and justice for the downtrodden.

Head brought with him a lifetime of civil rights activism, which he shared with many in Toronto’s Black community when he moved here in 1959.

He is credited for being among “the first to put racism on the agenda of the Canadian conscience,” and even helped to end segregation at a golf course in Windsor.

His activism started in the 1930s in a series of “sit-in” protests against U.S. restaurants and bars, barbers, shopkeepers and movie house owners who would not serve Blacks. These protests took place a decade before the civil rights movement began.

Head was born in Milner, Georgia, in 1914. He passed away in 1993 at the age of 79.

His father died when he was 11, but his mother stressed the importance of education, telling him he would have to be “twice as smart as whites to compete,” words that he never forgot.

He once complained that he was fired from a job for glancing at a newspaper. His boss didn’t think Blacks should know how to read.

Head took two years to save enough tuition to graduate from Alabama’s Tuskegee Institute with a Bachelor of Science in Education. He was named in a 1939 Who’s Who Among Students in American Universities and Colleges.

He was shaped by his work with the Congress of Racial Equality (CORE) and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP). He became a director at Flanner House in Indianapolis, which served needy Black people.

Head said he decided to move to Windsor “to get my children away from a racist society.” Here he found a job as the Executive Director of the Windsor Group Therapy Project. In 1965 he became the Director of Research and Planning for the Social Planning Council of Metropolitan Toronto.

He also lectured in social work at the University of Windsor, University of Michigan, Wayne State University and Sir Williams College, in Chicago.

The academic is best known for being one of the co-founders in 1975 of the Urban Alliance on Race Relations (UARR), which stood up for the rights of Blacks and racial minorities then, as it still does today. That was during a time of much more racial unrests involving police and Blacks in Toronto.

I remember Head as a tall, quiet, articulate man who would often visit the office of Contrast Newspaper, on Bathurst St., where I worked, to pick up a paper or seek coverage for an upcoming event.

He was busy with a list of organizations including the Canadian Civil Liberties Association of Toronto as Vice-President in 1967, the National Welfare Council as a founding member and the National Black Coalition of Canada as Chairman and President from 1977 to 1982.

As Coalition head in 1981 he testified before the Joint U.S. House Senate Committee on the “Canadian Constitution.”  He was also on the executive of The Metro Committee on Race Relations and Policing.

Even back then Head was an “outspoken critic of Metro Police,” citing racial profiling in their practices. The fight against racial profiling still continues today more than 40 years later.

“He opposed segregation of the races all his life,” according to reports. “He denounced the idea of all-Black schools and social services, asserting, ‘segregation is inherently inferior'”.

Head was assaulted in 1980 while climbing the steps to the offices of UARR, on College St., at Spadina Ave. He was attacked from behind with several blows to the head, resulting in a fall down the stairs. No one was ever arrested for that offence.

Unfazed, in 1988 he took part in the Donald Marshall Inquiry Commission in Nova Scotia. This investigation led to his ground-breaking paper entitled “Discrimination Against Blacks in Nova Scotia: The Criminal Justice System.”

The well-respected sociologist and community planner leaves behind a rich legacy in Toronto for his work in race relations, human rights, city and community building.

 

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Filed Under: Uncategorized

Fighter jet pilot Wally Peters helped the Snowbirds

May 21, 2018 by SouthEtobicokeNews

For those of us who yearly attend the Canadian International Air Show at the CNE to see the iconic Snowbirds, it is comforting to learn that the world-famous flying team was partially established by the nation’s first Black fighter jet pilot.

The late Major Wally Peters was a trailblazer who retired after reaching heights never attained by a Black man in the Royal Canadian Air Force.
He didn’t let racism stop him from becoming Canada’s first Black fighter jet pilot, who worked as a flight instructor and who flew with the famed Snowbirds, the RCAF aerial performance team, which is a main attraction at the CNE air show every September.
Peters is listed in RCAF records as being a member of the aircrew servicing the Snowbirds in 1981 and 1982.
The native of Litchfield, Annapolis County, Nova Scotia, was born in 1937, and was the youngest of six children. They were the only Black family in that county.

A gifted athlete, he won a scholarship to Mount Allison University in Sackville, New Brunswick, where his presence on campus proved controversial. Some of his classmates refused to room with him because he was Black.
He soon earned a reputation, while completing his engineering degree, as the fastest running back on campus and won several awards for his skills on the football team, including rookie of the year and most valuable player.
While at the university, he met and married Nancy, a white woman from Sackville. The couple faced discrimination at the time due to their interracial marriage. But, Peters kept his head down and never publicly complained about the racism he faced at the time.
He enlisted in the RCAF to be a pilot in the early 1960s at the age of 24, thinking if he could drive a car, he can fly a plane, according to a Department of Veteran Affairs video.
“Up to that point, I had never known any Black pilots in the military and it was a feeling of accomplishment,” Walters told Veterans Affairs.
He recalled his graduation was tainted by racist comments made by the guest presenter. “What are you doing here?” the man asked Peters. When he replied that he was graduating, the man asked him as what. Peters told him that he was graduating as a pilot.
To which the man responded: “In my day … you would never had got past rear gunner,” Peters relived in the Canada Heroes Remember video.

He went on to a distinguished aviation career that included becoming the Canadian Armed Forces’ first human rights officer, as well as an adviser to the United Nations Security Council, offering advice on the tactical movement of troops by air.
At the UN, he was called on to analyze and brief a security council after the Soviet military shot down a Korean civilian jet in a controversial 1983 incident.
“I remember sitting on the 32nd floor of the United Nations, allowing myself to daydream, and say: ‘Boys, this is a long way from Litchfield, Nova Scotia,’ ” he recalled in the video series.
The RCAF never forgot Peters and in a memoriam credited him for being Canada’s first Black jet fighter pilot and A1 flying instructor.
“He was involved in the development of the Snowbirds and later flew with them,” the Air Force said on its website. “Mr. Peters also piloted Hercules cargo aircraft on assorted missions around the globe.”
Peters also played a role in the creation of the Canadian Aviation Safety Board (CASB), which investigated Air India Flight 182 that was brought down in the Atlantic Ocean in June, 1985, by a terrorist bomb.

That led to a job at Transport Canada, where he was promoted to director and director general with responsibility for systems safety before retiring in 1998.
The highly-respected Peters was also an adviser in the 1991 Nation Air accident investigation in Saudi Arabia, chaired the International Data Exchange Aviation Safety and developed and implemented risk management training programs.
Through his rise he never forgot his roots and was a founder and first president of the New Brunswick Association for the Advancement of Coloured People.
The airman passed away in 2013 at the age of 76. He left behind a wife, three daughters and five grandchildren.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Armstrong fought for civil rights in Toronto

May 4, 2018 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Civil rights and union activist Bromley Armstrong has been in the trenches fighting to improve the lives of Black people in Ontario long before it became trendy or cool.

Armstrong, who is now 92, arrived in Toronto from Jamaica in 1947 and dedicated most of his life to the civil rights movement and helping others as a trade unionist.

He started off as a shop steward for Local 439 of the United Automobile Workers (UAW) and became a leader in the Canadian trade union movement. He was also a member of the Toronto & York Region Labour Council, who will be presenting the Bromley L. Armstrong Award for the 14th year on May 18.

Described as a “blood and guts” ally of the working poor, Armstrong will best be remembered for taking part in the Dresden sit-ins held in the early 1950s to highlight some Ontario restaurants that refused to serve Blacks.

Since 1948, a group called the National Unity Association (NUA) of Chatham, Dresden and North Buxton had been fighting city officials unsuccessfully to stand up for social justice and end discrimination for Blacks.

Some of the businesses in Dresden were not complying with the April 1954 Fair Accommodation Practices Act, which made it illegal in Ontario to refuse service to Blacks at any establishment.

Dresden was important because it is the home of Uncle Tom’s Cabin and a terminus of the Underground Railroad, which brought hundreds of fugitive slaves from the U.S. to freedom in Canada. Blacks made up nearly 20% of Dresden’s residents by the 1950s, yet a number of restaurants and barbershops refused to serve them.

Realizing it was time for a change, Armstrong and other activists from the Toronto-based Joint Labour Committee for Human Rights conducted sit-ins at the racist restaurants, testing the owners’ non-compliance with the law.

The owners were taken to court and the law upheld in a legal case, which was Canada’s first successful test of laws making discrimination illegal.

Armstrong, some recalled, in one encounter calmly demanded service of a bigoted restaurant owner, who was angrily wielding a meat cleaver in his kitchen.

The Dresden sit-ins received prominent coverage in Toronto newspapers and propelled the civil rights movement to success. The incident convinced then Ontario Premier Leslie Frost to publicly affirm the province’s commitment to anti-discrimination laws and contributed to the creation of the Ontario Human Rights Commission in 1961.

Armstrong in the 1950s and 60s took on the Toronto “rent-ins,” in which Black or mixed-race couples were refused apartments for rent by bigoted owners claiming the unit was already rented. Instead it was offered to a white couple who appeared later and were part of the tests.

Similar legal cases were successfully built by the activists against the “rent-ins,” and later “private clubs,” to help bring them to attention of the legal system.

He also in 1954 led a delegation to Ottawa to protest the federal government’s restrictive immigration policy that shut out Blacks and other visible minorities.

Armstrong kept busy publishing The Islander, a weekly newspaper in the 1970s. He also served as a commissioner on the Ontario Human Rights Commission, adjudicator with the Ontario Labour Relations Board, convinced then North York Mayor Mel Lastman to set up the first municipal race relations committee and sat on the Board of Governors of the Canadian Centre for Police Relations.

For his services, he was presented the Order of Distinction in Jamaica, Order of Ontario in 1992 and the Order of Canada two years later.

He also received an honourary Doctor of Laws degree from York University in 2013 for his lifelong battle against racism.

Armstrong along the way helped to establish a list of community organizations; including the Caribbean Soccer Club, the Canadian Association for the Advancement of Coloured People, the Jamaican Canadian Association, the Jamaican Canadian Credit Union, the Urban Alliance on Race Relations, the National Black Coalition of Canada and the National Council of Jamaican and Supportive Organizations in Canada.

His autobiography Bromley: Tireless Champion for Just Causes was published in 2000.

 

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Filed Under: Uncategorized

Dudley Laws and the struggle continues

April 23, 2018 by SouthEtobicokeNews

The late and fearless civil rights activist Dudley Laws inspired many in the community for leading dozens of protests and marches to end the many police shootings of Black men in Toronto and surrounding cities.

Laws, who died this week in 2011 at the age of 77, gained prominence for heading dozens, if not hundreds, of anti-police brutality marches and rallies during the 1970s and 1980s to highlight young Black men who were being shot by Toronto and other GTA officers, most who were acquitted of all charges at trial.

A life-long activist, Laws left Saint Thomas Parish, Jamaica, for Britain in 1955 and soon began helping members of the West Indian community, including the Somerleyton and Geneva Road Association in Brixton.

He moved to Toronto in 1965 and joined the Universal African Improvement Association (UAIA), an organization founded by Marcus Mosiah Garvey in 1914 that helped fellow Blacks.

Frustrated and concerned by the escalating number of police slayings of Black youths then and still now, he and other community leaders vowed to act.

In 1988, Laws, along with the late lawyer Charles Roach, activist Sherona Hall and teacher Lennox Farrell co-founded the Black Action Defense Committee (BADC) following the police shooting of Lester Donaldson. The organization is now marking its 30-years of service.

I have been covering the anti-police protests as a reporter since the 1980s and it seems that little has changed today to improve relations between police and the Black community in Toronto.

Donaldson, 44, of Jamaica, was diagnosed as suffering from schizophrenia when killed while brandishing a small paring knife in August 1988 by Const. David Deviney, who was charged with manslaughter and not surprisingly acquitted at trial.

The acquittal led to protests and demonstrations by members of the Black community, who wanted Deviney jailed for murder. Front page photos in Toronto newspapers the next day showed a smiling Deviney celebrating his acquittal by smoking a large cigar and surrounded by his police friends.

Donaldson was the latest in a series of shootings of young Black men in Toronto by what appeared to be ‘trigger happy cops.’ In December that same year Michael Wade Lawson, 17, was shot by Peel police in the back of the head and killed in an incident relating to a stolen car.

Once again, the two officers charged in that shooting were acquitted of all charges in 1992.

The police slayings continued with Faraz Suleman, 16, who was slain by a York Regional Police officer in a suspected car jacking. The charge against the officer was thrown out in court.

Next to die was Hugh Dawson, 31, who was killed by a Toronto officer in March 1997 during an alleged drug takedown. The officer was acquitted. Tony Romagnuolo, 44, was buried next. He was shot after getting in a dispute with a York officer. The officer was acquitted of all charges.

The deaths by police continued with Darren Varley in 1999. Otto Vass, 55, in August 2000; Eric Osawe, 26, in September 2010 and Mehrdad Bayrami in 2012 and so on.  Today more than three dozen Black men have since been killed by police in the GTA; including the high-profile July 2015 slaying of Andrew Loku: who was shot by a Toronto cop, who was not charged.

Laws due to his anti-police activism in the early 1990s was targeted by police who charged him with alien smuggling; which was overturned on appeal.

Still BADC activists, aided by Black Lives Matter Toronto, soldier on in countless marches and protests in a 30-year fight to end the police shooting and killing of Black men.

The demonstrations led to the creation of Ontario’s Special Investigations Unit (SIU) in 1990 to probe police shootings or killing of civilians and sexual assault allegations.

BADC will be celebrating its first 30-years of service with the Dudley Laws Scholarship Fundraising Brunch being held on May 6 at the Jamaican Canadian Centre (JCA). Long-standing supporters Kingsley Gilliam, Nancy Simms and Oliver Rose will be honoured for their many years of activism.

Tickets are $55 and available at the JCA.

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Filed Under: Uncategorized

Freed slave Mink made and lost millions in TO

April 16, 2018 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Toronto through its 184-year history has always been a city of equal opportunity where ambitious men and women can work hard to make, or easily lose, their amassed fortunes.

And it is not surprising that one of Toronto’s first Black millionaire was born the son of a freed U.S. slave before heading to our city to seek his fame and fortune more than 160-years-ago.

James Mink worked hard and was earning lots of money in Toronto in the 1840s and 50s’, during a time when slavery was rampant in the U.S.

Mink was born in the U.S. in 1811 and was the youngest of 11 children of a slave known as “Mink.” His father and mother were owned by United Empire Loyalist Johan Herkimer.

Mink, who was smart and had business savvy, fled to Toronto which was then a busy and bustling city with many opportunities for Blacks. The city was incorporated in 1834.

He and his brother George started hotels, liveries and coach services, first in Kingston, Ont., and then in Toronto after Mink moved here.

The brothers knew how to drive a wagon and transported travellers between Toronto and Kingston, then the capital city of Upper Canada. They drove passengers to a halfway point in Brighton, where they exchanged passengers, procured fresh horses and returned with the passengers.

Their business prospered and soon James was a self-made millionaire, a distinction held by very few Blacks during those days when they could barely obtain a job.

In time the siblings had gained the respect of their fellow Canadians and were assigned much-desired mail delivery runs with Canada Post. George would take the mail from Kingston to Montreal, while James took the mail to Kingston and other towns surrounding Toronto.

As their prominence grew, James’ hotel was used as a voting station during the Toronto elections. The mayor even hired his coach service for his inauguration in the 1850s and farmers would stay at his hotel when they came to town to sell their produce at St. Lawrence Market.

By that time many Toronto residents were using their livery service, including high-profile citizens as the city Sheriff.

The brothers were even given credit for starting the first public transit systems in their cities. In Toronto, travellers were taken from the Town of Yorkville to the market by a Mink livery wagon.

A prosperous Mink went on to marry Elizabeth, who is described as “a white Irish immigrant.” It is reported that James gave a hefty $10,000 dowry to her family to obtain her hand.

U.S. businessman William Johnson married Mink’s daughter, Minnie, and took her on a honeymoon to the U.S., where he apparently sold her into slavery to a Virginian tobacco plantation owner.

Mink was stunned to learn of his daughter’s plight and went through a lot of red tape to get the British to buy her back on his behalf, which they did. Some researchers have concerns and question if Minnie was ever sold as a slave.

She did return to Toronto, where she mothered a son and lived on a Mink family farm on Don Rd. and Danforth Rds. area, according to Toronto census records from the 1860s.

The family enjoyed a fine life for many years, until one day an arsonist set fire to Mink’s livery and hotel and they lost everything since there were no insurance coverage then.

Eventually, trains began transporting people into the cities and George and James Mink’s business became redundant and eventually closed up.

Mink died in 1866 at the age of 55.  He was living alone near today’s Windsor Arms Hotel in Toronto, at the time. The former millionaire was buried in Riverdale Cemetery.

His story was told in the loosely-based autobiographical 1996 made for TV movie Captive Heart: The James Mink Story, starring Lou Gossett, Jr. as James Mink and Kate Nelligan as his wife.

It is very sad for us today since large sections of Mink’s life has been undocumented, nor can records be found to retrace his once-richly exploits.

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Filed Under: Business

L.A. Riots 26-years later

April 9, 2018 by SouthEtobicokeNews

By TOM GODFREY

It was one of the first police beatings of a Black man that was captured on grainy videotape before the Internet age and it sparked the deadliest racial riots in Lost Angeles, which is still simmering 26-years later.

The name Rodney King still brings back to many haunting memories of a Black man laying bleeding in the middle of Florence and Normandie Sts. in South Central L.A. as he was pummelled, kicked, beaten and Tasered by four police officers in March 1991.

Bystander George Holliday videotaped the vicious beating and released it to the Media, where it spread like wildfire worldwide, way before the age of Facebook or Twitter.

Even though the 81-second video showed the officers kicking and clubbing King 56 times as he laid on the road, all four were found not guilty of any offences on April 29, 1992, despite the many witnesses. The video showed 20 Los Angeles police officers standing around the scene.

Seventeen of the cops were not indicted or disciplined for failing to intervene to help King as he was being assaulted.

King, then 25, suffered multiple cuts and bruises, 11 fractures, a black eye, broken leg and a scar from a stun gun which jolted him with 50,000-volt shocks.

Within hours, thousands of outraged African Americans in South Central began taking to the streets to protest the all-white jury verdict. The looting, shooting, burning and stealing went on for five days. I had never seen such brazen acts of vandalism in my life.

City leaders introduced a strict dusk-to-dawn curfew that was in place for a week and enforced in the city and county of Los Angeles.

Some 1,100 Marines, 600 Army soldiers, and 6,500 National Guard troops were dispatched to quell the riots, which by then had led to the deaths of 55 people and injury to 2,000 others. More than 1,100 buildings, including 700 retail stores, were torched or destroyed by fire. Damages exceeded $1 billion.

The story made major news in Canada and across the world. At the Toronto Sun newspaper, myself and photographer Fred Thornhill were dispatched that Friday night to cover the lawlessness.

Large tracts of L.A. were covered in smoke when we arrived. We were able to secure a cabbie at the airport and headed to the hotspots. We saw a pick up truck ram into a gas station, where culprits loaded the vehicle with batteries and other parts, before setting the place on fire as they sped off.

Thornhill then had a bottle thrown at him that smashed a passenger side window of the taxi where he sat. We also watched as armed cops escorted and guarded emergency workers as they restored power in some areas. It turned out gangbangers were firing at the hydro workers.

In time, King refused a $200,000 scholarship from the city and launched a lawsuit instead. He settled a civil suit with the city for $3.8 million and went on to live a relatively quiet life.

He still had a number of drinking and driving type run-ins with police over the years. He last known DUI was in 2011.

Ironically, it was during his lawsuit against the city when he met his fiancée, Cynthia Kelly, who was a juror at the proceedings.

King at one point wrote a book, “The Riot Within: My Journey From Rebellion to Redemption,” about his experience during the riots and being in the media spotlight.

He also made a movie about his life and invested some of his settlement in a record label, Straight Alta-Pazz Records, hoping to employ minority employees, but it went out of business.

He sobered up during the last stages of his life and helped others by becoming a celebrity rehab speaker known for shaking off alcohol and drugs.

King was found dead in his swimming pool in June 2012 at the age of 47. His death was the result of accidental drowning, with alcohol and drugs being contributing factors, authorities said.

“Some people feel like I’m some kind of hero. Others hate me,” King once told the BBC. “They say I deserved it. Other people, I can hear them mocking me for when I called for an end to the destruction, like I’m a fool for believing in peace.”

 

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Filed Under: Uncategorized

MPP Braithwaite fought to end racial segregation

April 2, 2018 by SouthEtobicokeNews

By Tom Godfrey

Ontario’s first Black MPP Leonard Braithwaite fought valiantly to end racial segregation in our schools for which he is still fondly remembered by many in the community who are gearing up for the upcoming elections in June.

The well-liked Braithwaite opened the door for Black MPPs as Alvin Curling, Zanana Akanda, Michael Coteau, Mitzie Hunter; not including MPs as the late Howard McCurdy, Lincoln Alexander, Hedy Fry, Jean Augustine and today’s Greg Fergus, Celina Caesar-Chavannes and immigration Minister Ahmed Hussen.

Lenny, as he was affectionately called, represented the riding of Etobicoke while serving as a Liberal member of the Ontario legislature from 1963 to 1975. He was re-elected in 1967 and 1971 and served as a Liberal critic for labour and welfare.

The popular lawyer and Air Force veteran died in his hometown of Toronto last March 2012. He was 88.

He narrowly captured his seat by just 443 votes and a headline in the Toronto Daily Star then read: “Wins Etobicoke: Braithwaite Ontario’s First Negro MPP.”

Braithwaite is best known for his 1964 maiden speech to the Legislature in which he spoke passionately about the racial segregation that was taking place in some Ontario schools.

It seems incredible now, but Ontario in 1964 still had a law on its books mandating so-called “black schools,” which segregated students by colour.

“There has not been a need for such schools since before the beginning of this century,” Braithwaite told his fellow MPPs. “There may have been a call for “coloured” schools when the Underground Railroad brought U.S. blacks out of slavery to Ontario, but “those days have passed.”

Under the terms of the Ontario Separate Schools Act, the heads of five or more families in a “city, town or village, being coloured people,” could petition the local municipal council to establish “one or more separate schools for coloured people.”

It so happened that a group of black parents had spent a year lobbying unsuccessfully for their children to be integrated into a new school in a nearby town.

Braithwaite would rarely back down in his many fights for the rights of visible minorities and gender equality.

He began his political career in 1960 as a member of the Etobicoke Board of Education. Two years later he was elected as an alderman on the Etobicoke council and ran in the provincial election in 1963, defeating the Progressive Conservative candidate.

He was proud of his service and friendships made in the Royal Canadian Air Force during WW11.

Braithwaite was a graduate from the University of Toronto, where he earned a Bachelor of Commerce degree. He earned a Master of Business Administration from the Harvard Business School, graduating in 1952, and graduated from Osgoode Hall Law School in 1958. He was the first Black lawyer elected as a member of the Governing Council of the Law Society of Upper Canada.

At Osgoode, he was elected class president in his first year and by his fourth, he was president of the student body and was awarded a Gold Key for leadership.

He would never forget about the racism that he faced at the time, during which he was armed with a first-rate education and spotless war record but could not find a job. It was back in the days when your photo had to be attached to a resume.

He was finally given a job working on the night shift at a chocolate factory after the plant’s foremen, who had never received a Black applicant, decided he could not turn away a war veteran.

Through the years he established a small law practice in his beloved Etobicoke, which he would operate for many years.

Following his defeat in 1975, he returned to municipal politics, winning a spot on Etobicoke’s Board of Control. In 1985, he was persuaded to run as a last-minute Liberal hopeful in that year’s provincial election, but lost to the Conservative incumbent.

He managed to gain local fame by helping to erect the first sound barriers to absorb traffic noise between homes and highways in the Etobicoke area.

Braithwaite is still loved and cherished in Etobicoke for his 12-years of unselfish service to the community.

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Filed Under: Uncategorized

Fil Fraser first Black Cdn. broadcaster, mentor

April 2, 2018 by SouthEtobicokeNews

 

By Tom Godfrey

A memorial service is being held next month in Montreal for Fil Fraser, who is best-known as Canada’s first Black broadcaster; having mentored many young Blacks over the years.

Fraser, who lived in Toronto for a number of years, was based in Edmonton where he worked as a journalist, columnist, author, radio personality, educator, television program director, and radio, TV and feature film producer.

Felix Blache-Fraser, or Fil, as he liked to be called, was born on August 1932 in Montreal. He passed away last December 3 at the age of 85.

His son, Randall, said a celebration of his father’s life will take place on May 20 at the Urgel Bourgie Cemetery, in St. Laurent.

“There will be a program of remembrances, followed by conversation and connection,” Randall told Share. “He loved his time in Toronto, but was also happy to return to Edmonton where most of his family live.”

Fraser, and his wife, Gladys, lived in the downtown area from 1995 to 2000 while he was in Toronto working as Chief Executive Officer of Vision TV, where he is credited for making positive changes.

Former journalist Desmond Brown, who is now a Toronto realtor, called Fraser a good friend and mentor.

“Fil was like a father to me,” recalled Brown. “He was a man of action and had a way of bringing out the best in people, including me.”

He will never forget Fraser mentoring him in the late 1990s to attend journalism school if he wanted to become a successful journalist. He attended university and ended up working for many years at CTV News and the National Post.

“I was 37-years-old and already ten years into my first tenure in real estate,” Brown said. “I trusted Fil, so I applied to Ryerson’s School of Journalism, got accepted as a mature student, and quit my job as a real estate agent.”

The oldest of six children, Fraser experienced discrimination first-hand while growing up as an English-speaker in Montreal. He channelled those experiences into his work.

He went on to become Canada’s first black broadcaster, landing a job at the age of 19 at Foster Hewitt’s CKFH in Toronto, the first of many radio and television gigs he held across Canada. In 1965, Fraser moved to Edmonton and became a senior producer at Canada’s first educational television channel, known as MEETA (Metropolitan Edmonton Educational Television Association).

He became a popular public figure in that city, who was known for his warm and engaging approach on his CJCA Radio talk show, which was the highest-rated local program from 1974 to 1979. Later, he moved to ITV television with The Fil Fraser Show, following up a few years later with Newsmakers.

Along the way he founded the Regina Weekly Mirror newspaper, which ran for some time in Saskatchewan.

During the 1970s he formed his own production company which focused on dramas as Why Shoot the Teacher? and Marie-Anne, about the first European woman at Fort Edmonton. He gained prominence with the release of The Hounds of Notre Dame, about a storied boys’ school in Wilcox, Sask.

Fraser, a member of the Order of Canada, founded the Banff International Films for Television Festival, Alberta Motion Picture Industries Association, and established a master’s program in Canadian film at Athabasca University.

He was appointed Chief Commissioner for the Alberta Human Rights Commission from 1989 to 1992, during which time the body heard complaints about discrimination based on race and sexual orientation.

Fil liked to write and was the author of three books and received the Alberta Award of Excellence in 2015 for his promotion of the arts.

His 2006 book, Running Uphill: The Fast, Short Life of Canadian Champion Harry Jerome, looked at the pioneering Black Canadian track star. He then completed How the Blacks Created Canada, part of a series about how different cultural groups contributed to the development of Canada.

Fraser served on the Alberta Task Force on Film and the Federal Task Force on Broadcasting Policy and was the Governor of the Canadian Journalism Foundation as well as a member of the Canadian Association of Black Journalists.                                                                           – 30 –

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Nobel Prize Doc

April 2, 2018 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Column April 5.18

It will be 50-years this week that U.S. civil rights leader Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was killed by a sniper while standing on a balcony outside his room at the infamous Lorraine Motel in Memphis.

The shooter, James Earl Ray, fled to Toronto and hid out for several weeks in west-end rooming houses as he obtained new travel documents.

King Jr., was outside Room 306 speaking to colleagues as Ray lined-up his rifle and fired a fatal shot from the bathroom of an adjacent rooming house that overlooked the Lorraine.

It was just after 6:05 p.m. on April 4, 1968 when the father and civil rights icon was struck in the lower right side of his face by the assassin’s bullet. He collapsed to the floor and was cradled by friend Ralph Abernathy, as closest aide Jesse Jackson called for help.

The death threats against King Jr., and his entourage, had been mounting as he spoke at Southern rallies to help down-trodden Blacks. The man, who once had a dream, was rushed to St. Joseph’s Hospital, where he was pronounced dead about an hour later. He was 39.

King Jr. had dismissed another threat against him as he travelled to Memphis to prepare for a march on behalf of striking Memphis sanitation workers, who were seeking the same pay as whites.

News of his death spread like wildfire across the U.S., angering both Blacks and whites, who took to streets in more than 100 cities. More than 40 people were killed during the riots, robberies and the looting and burning of businesses.

President Lyndon B. Johnson called for a national day of mourning on April 7, which led to the closure of public libraries, museums, schools and businesses.

The next day King’s widow, Coretta Scott King, and other family members joined thousands of participants in a march in Memphis honoring King Jr. and supporting the sanitation workers.

His funeral service at Atlanta’s Ebenezer Baptist Church was attended by many of the nation’s political and civil rights leaders.

More than 100,000 mourners followed two mules pulling King Jr.’s coffin through the solemn streets. His body was interred in a crypt at the King Center, an institution founded by Coretta.

Shortly after the assassination, a policeman discovered a bundle containing a Remington rifle next door to the boarding house, which led to the FBI launching one of its largest international investigations in history.

Fingerprints lifted from the rifle led to Ray, a small-time hood who had escaped from a Missouri prison in April 1967, where he was serving 20-years for armed robbery.

Ray later admitted that he fled the murder scene to Atlanta, where he boarded a Greyhound bus for Detroit. Using an alias, he hopped in a cab across the border to Windsor, where he caught a train for Toronto’s Union Station.

“I got to Toronto pretty late in the day (on April 6). Then I started walking and trying to find a room and I walked quite a while until I found this Ossington St. address,” Ray told the Toronto Star in a 1993 jailhouse interview.

Ray said he hid at two west-end rooming houses as he obtained new documents to travel to Europe and then Africa to “earn a living as a mercenary.”

“I was just trying to get a passport and probably I think I’d have an easier time getting a passport in Toronto than Montreal (because) it’s English speaking and all of that,” he told the Star’s Robert Benzie.

On May 6, just over a month after the death of King Jr., Ray bought a ticket to London from a Bloor St. W. travel agency. He was nabbed at Heathrow Airport on June 8 trying to fly to Belgium.

He later confessed to the crime and was sentenced to a 99-year prison term. He died in 1998 after recanting his guilty plea and claiming to be framed by political forces. There are still those today who believe King Jr. was killed by the mafia or U.S. police.
– 30 –

 

 

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