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The words of MLK Jr. live on forever

April 9, 2015 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Martin Luther King Jr. inspired people around the world
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By TOM GODFREY

It was 47 years ago last week that U.S. civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was slain by an assassin’s bullet in a shot that changed the world forever.

The Baptist minister and human rights activist was killed on April 4, 1968 as he stood on the second-floor balcony of the Lorraine Motel in Memphis.

Rev. King, 39, then an internationally known figure, was in Tennessee to support a strike by sanitation workers when he was assassinated.

He had received many death threats before but had earned his reputation the hard way by fighting for the then not-popular rights and freedoms for Blacks.

King was deeply involved with the 1955 Montgomery Bus Boycott in which Blacks refused to ride that city’s public transit system for 381 days, stemming from the arrest of Rosa Parks for not giving up a seat on a bus to a White person.

A husband and father, King played a pivotal role in ending the legal segregation of African-Americans in the South and other areas, as well as the creation of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965.

He led the 1963 historic march to Washington, D.C., that drew more than 200,000 people to the Lincoln Memorial, where he made his famous “I Have a Dream” speech, emphasizing his belief that someday all men can be equals.

At 35, King was the youngest person ever awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. He donated his 1964 prize money, a tidy sum then of $54,123 (US) to the civil rights movement.

King’s prominence grew with his many marches in support of voting or housing rights for Black and segregated workers. His message of nonviolent struggle has since spread across the world.

At the time of his death, he was trying to organize a protest in Washington against poverty, and had become outspoken as an opponent of the Vietnam War.

His words and philosophy have been taught in schools in Toronto and across the world and have enlightened generations of students. And still do to this day.

His “I Have a Dream” speech is a favourite of many young people and not long ago I heard the lines in a rap song. It’s even been reprinted on T-shirts, posters and running shoes.

King was the inspiration for many, including U.S. President Barack Obama, and it was to no one’s surprise that his murder sparked riots and demonstrations in more than 100 cities across the U.S., including one right here in Toronto, that ended at the U.S. Consulate General.

Black-and-white news photos from 1968 show an orderly group of about 100 young Toronto Blacks with signs rallying downtown on the night of King’s death.

People also took to churches to pray for his wife, Coretta, and their young family.

U.S. police at this time had launched an international search for fugitive killer James Earl Ray, who believe it or not, was hiding right here on the streets of Toronto.

Ray, it seems, had fled to Toronto after the slaying and lived for about a month in Parkdale and other areas as he acquired a Canadian passport under a different name.

He used the document to fly to Britain and was captured at London Heathrow Airport in July 1968 while trying to return to Canada using the flagged passport.

He was extradited to Tennessee to stand trial for King’s murder and in 1969 agreed to a plea bargain and was sentenced to 99 years in prison, where he died in 1998.

In 1983, former President Ronald Reagan signed a bill creating a U.S. federal holiday in honour of Dr. King that is observed on the third Monday of January.

Martin Luther King Jr. Day is also celebrated in Canada and other countries worldwide.

The day is a reaffirmation of basic human rights, equality and justice for many, including me and my family.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

International Women’s Day Celebrations

March 12, 2015 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Former MP Jean Augustine, with Connie Dejak, CEO of Runnymede Healthcare Centre and legendary Toronto singer Liberty Silver at an event to mark International Women's Day in Etobicoke.

Former MP Jean Augustine, with Connie Dejak, CEO of Runnymede Healthcare Centre and legendary Toronto singer Liberty Silver at an event to mark International Women’s Day in Etobicoke.

Singer Liberty Silver and former MP Jean Augustine were among the many women in Toronto and across the world who took part in International Women’s Day activities to celebrate their achievements.

As hundreds of women marched in downtown Toronto, others took part in dozens of gatherings across the city.

More than 30 women took part in a community breakfast to mark the day at the Jean Augustine Centre for Women’s Empowerment in Etobicoke.

“We are very fortunate that we live here in this great country,” Augustine told Share. “We have a lot to be grateful for in Canada.”

The former Liberal MP and outgoing Ontario Fairness Commissioner said women are suffering in many conflict areas of the world, where they are trying to obtain an education or basic human rights.

Connie Dejak, Chief Executive Officer of the Runnymede Healthcare Centre, said the day provides women an opportunity to enjoy their successes.

“It is important to get women together to celebrate our accomplishments,” Dejak told Share. “Today also allows us to focus on what has to be done.”

She said women still have a long way to go to obtain equality in the gender gap.

“Sometimes it feels like we are moving backwards,” said Dejak. “We are not close to being equal as men.

Silver, a two-time Juno Award winner, said women have to support each other to move ahead.

“Everyone has the power to change the world,” she said. “We as women have a long way to go and a lot of issues to face.”

Silver, who once opened for reggae icon Bob Marley in a concert at Madison Square Garden, said there has to be more positive role models in the community.

“When we come together and support each other we can change the world,” she told Share. “We can change the mindset of other women.”

Popular Toronto actress and former model, Linda V. Carter, said it is uplifting for women to have a day dedicated to them and their issues.

“This is really an important day for women,” Carter told Share. “I have two daughters and I know it is important for women to be empowered.”

Her family has been celebrating the day with their children for many years.

“When you empower a woman, you empower the world,” she said. “It is a positive message for women all over.”

Carter in 2012 completed a TV documentary “The Making of a Judge”, that is based on the accomplishments of her father, Justice George E. Carter.

She also performed in a 2000 TV movie, “Hendrix”, based on the life of rock icon, Jimi Hendrix.

Meanwhile, hundreds attended the annual downtown march with women calling for pay equity, better child care and other changes.

Some were calling for police action on the more than 1,200 indigenous women and girls who have gone missing or have been murdered over the past three decades in Canada.

The day was first celebrated in 1911 when more than a million women attended rallies in Austria, Denmark, Germany and Switzerland. At that time they were calling for the right to vote, work and hold public office.

http://sharenews.com/community-breakfast-held-to-mark-international-womens-day/

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Former Boxing Champ Spider Jones wow Bay Streeters

March 10, 2015 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Former Boxing Champ Spider Jones with some of those his Believe to Achieve Foundation helped in a recent Fight for Youth boxing tourney on Bay Street.

Former Boxing Champ Spider Jones with some of those his Believe to Achieve Foundation helped in a recent Fight for Youth boxing tourney on Bay Street.

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
March 3, 2015
TORONTO-Radio and TV personality Spider Jones would like to thank Mayor John Tory and the many Bay Street money-men and women for supporting an almost sold-out charity fight card featuring some of Toronto’s top amateurs boxers who will be taking on rivals from Nova Scotia.
 
The fight card on Thursday night includes two must-see bouts by Toronto prize-winning female fighters Holly Hunter and Sara Gheisari.
 
There are still a few tickets left to catch this thrilling, blow-by-blow, one-night-only extravaganza.
In attendance will be Canadian Heavyweight Boxing Champs George Chuvalo and Razor Donovan Ruddock, Michael Wekerle, of Dragons’ Den fame and our sponsor Scott Sutherland.
Where: Arcadian Court 401 Bay Street, Simpson Tower, 8th Floor 
When: Thursday, March 5
Doors Open 5:30 PM – Cocktail Reception with celebrity special guests  
Bouts begin at 8:30 PM – 7 bouts with 14 elite amateurs “open class”
All funds raised will go to Jones’ Spider’s Web Youth Empowerment Centre and Believe to Achieve, a non-profit organization that has operated a youth drop-in Centre at 60 Chalkfarm Dr., in North York, for the last four years.
“We have to stop this youth violence by engaging them while they are young,” Jones insists. His Centre has a mission to inspire ‘at risk’ kids, students and troubled teens to remain in school and make their dreams of achievement a reality.
More than 60 youths attend the free Centre, that features a computer room, public speaking classes, homework help and college volunteers.
Jones, a former radio host, was a gang member as a young man. He spent time in prison and turned his life around. He returned to school and obtained a Degree in Journalism. He is an award-winning journalist who was inducted into the Canadian Boxing Hall of Fame in 1996.
For tables or further information call 416-452-2022 or visit believetoachieve.ca.
                                                                         – 30 –

Filed Under: Uncategorized

International Women’s Day

March 10, 2015 by SouthEtobicokeNews

Former MP Jean Augustine, with Connie Dejak, CEO of Runnymede Healthcare Centre and legendary Toronto singer Liberty Silver at an event to mark International Women's Day in Etobicoke.

Former MP Jean Augustine, with Connie Dejak, CEO of Runnymede Healthcare Centre and legendary Toronto singer Liberty Silver at an event to mark International Women’s Day in Etobicoke.

women, rights, freedoms

Women taking part in an international Women’s Day activities at the Jean Augustine Young Women’s Empowerment in Etobicoke.

women, rights, freedoms

Some of the participants of International Women’s Day activities held across the world.

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized

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