Scholars to talk slavery, reparations and education at Halifax conference - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Scholars to talk slavery, reparations and education at Halifax conference

The Universities Studying Slavery consortium is holding its annual conference outside of the United States for the first time.

Universities Studying Slavery Conference is being held outside the U.S. for first time

A Black woman with a short hair cut smiles at the camera among a crowd.
Afua Cooper, who holds the Killam Research Chair in Black and African Diaspora Studies at Dalhousie University and is the director of the Black People's History of Canada, will speak at the event. (Craig Paisley/CBC)

An international university conference that will examine slavery, reparations and education in Nova Scotia and around the world is being held in Halifax this week.

The Universities Studying Slavery consortiumis made up of a group of schools from Canada, the United States,Colombia, Scotland, Ireland and England, and isdedicated to researching, acknowledgingand atoning for their institution's history with slavery.

The consortium's annual conference, which waspostponed for two years due to the COVID-19 pandemic, is set to start on Wednesday.

It's being hosted byDalhousie University and the University of King's Collegein partnership with the Black Cultural Centre of Nova Scotia.

This is the first time the conference is being held outside the United States.

"We wanted for it to be big," Afua Cooper told CBC Radio's Information Morning Halifax on Tuesday.

"We wanted to showcase Nova Scotia, to showcase Halifax, to showcase Canada and also to delve into the histories of enslavement in this province and in this country, so I'm very excited about it."

Scholars and historians from across the globe will be in Halifax, for the Universities Studying Slavery Conference. It's the first time the conference is being held outside the United States. Distinguished local academics Dr. Afua Cooper and Dr. Sylvia Hamilton are guest speakers.

Cooper, who holds the Killam Research Chair in Black and African Diaspora Studies at Dalhousie University and is the director of the Black People's History of Canada, willspeakat the event.

She will also leada roundtable discussion on rethinking Black Loyalisthistory. Cooper said people often only consider that topic in the Nova Scotian contextandfail to look at the bigger picture, which included New Brunswick and Upper and Lower Canada.

"We kind of think that everything ends in 1792 when a third of the Black Loyalists went off to Sierra Leone," she said.

"But in fact, we believe that when that cohort went to Sierra Leone, slavery actually became even more entrenched or there was more Black unfreedom within these two Maritime provinces."

A Black woman leaning on a camera tri-pod with a red hat and purple scarf.
Sylvia Hamilton, a Canadian poet, artist, author and the Inglis professor at the University of King's College, will also give a talk at the conference. (Gaspereau Press)

Dr. Sylvia Hamilton, a Nova Scotia artist and the Inglis professor at King's, will also givea talk at the conference. It willexamine the lessons learned and legacies of the descendents of formerly enslaved people during the Loyalist period and when Black refugees came to Nova Scotia after the War of 1812.

"Freedom was really very elusiveand when we think about it,it was only 1834 that slavery was abolished in British colonies and the assumption is that once that act was passed, everything was fine," Hamilton told Information Morning.

"Well, that wasn't the case at all. The legacies of slavery are still with us today in place names, in some of the attitudes that have trickled down."

She said she wants to connect what she calls the "unbroken line of the Black presence,the presence of African-descended people in Nova Scotia" by bringing their work into contemporary times.

Hamiltonsaid she has found it challenging touncover the history of thoseBlack leaders,including Loyalists Thomas Peters and Catherine Abernathy, and Rev. Richard Preston, who founded the African United Baptist Association in Nova Scotia.

"I callthem visionaries because they had a belief that things could be better," she said.

"And from my point of view, what I try to do is to uphold that belief and to not disappoint, by uncovering those stories and finding ways to share those stories with the broader public."

Cooper and Hamilton will be joined by several other keynote speakersincluding John Mahama, the former president of Ghana; George Elliott Clarke, a renowned poet and a professor at the University of Toronto; andDavid Comissiong, a Barbadian lawyer and former senator, among others.

The conference runs until Saturday and thoseinterested in attendingcan still register on the consortium'swebsite.

For more stories about the experiences of Black Canadians from anti-Black racism to success stories within the Black community check outBeing Black in Canada, a CBC project Black Canadians can be proud of.You can read more stories here.

A banner of upturned fists, with the words 'Being Black in Canada'.

With files from Information Morning Halifax

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