Archive for the 'Community issues' Category

I want my CBC

Monday, March 30th, 2009

Harper’s conservatives have already proved that they’re not afraid to cut funding to artists and are only willing to backpedal when their move loses them crucial votes in Quebec.  They’ve also shown that when they do pull an about-face rhetorically, it usually ends up with those who lost out still losing out and new private […]

Judy Rebick launches “Transforming Power” – essential reading for activists!

Friday, March 27th, 2009

The Left has always been a fractured and fragmented place rife with disagreement and conflict about how best to challenge oppression and change the world. Can the days of disagreement between neo-Marxist-Leninist Communists and Third wave post-Anarcho-feminist radicals finally be over? Yes, according to Judy Rebick, who descended on Montreal recently with to promote her new book Transforming […]

Roman Fee Theatre Award given out for first time!

Monday, March 23rd, 2009

The first-ever Roman Fee Theatre Award was handed out on Thursday, March 19, 2009, in the Grand Salon of Montreal’s Hyatt Regency Hotel. The Donor and Student Excellence Recognition Ceremony was presided over by Concordia University President Judith Woodsworth, who handed out various awards and bursaries to graduate and undergraduate students across all faculties and […]

Police brutalize Anti-Police Brutality Demo – again!

Monday, March 16th, 2009

March 15th marked the 13th International Day Against Police Brutality, and in Montreal the mood was tense after an unusually brutal year whereby police officers killed a young man after they found him playing dice with his friends. Early in the evening on August 9th, 2008, 18 year old Fredy Villanueva was shot dead at […]

Whose history is it?

Wednesday, March 11th, 2009

Every person has a history and every group of people does, too.  What happens, though, when the history of two or more groups took place in the same geographic space?  Generally, that of the socio-economically, politically and militarily dominant group sets the narrative. One only has to look back a few weeks to the recent […]

International Women’s Day: Putting women back on the main agenda

Monday, March 9th, 2009

International Women’s Day is a yearly event that raises awareness about women’s issues across the planet, and has been doing so since 1911 after activist Clara Zetkin called for its creation in Copenhagen, Denmark. Created unanimously within a union hall called Folkets Hus (“The People’s House”), International Women’s Day has not shown any signs of […]

Women’s rights protest of a protest

Friday, March 6th, 2009

Any feminist and specifically Montreal feminists will tell you that the battle for gender equality is under attack every single minute of our lives. When its not Harper bashing long- earned rights such as equal pay, chewing away at access to safe abortion or closing the Women’s Commission, it’s Father’s Rights or Fathers-For Life groups […]

Anarchist Bookfair turns 10

Wednesday, March 4th, 2009

On Saturday, May 16th, the main auditorium in the CEDA in Little Burgundy will be filled with people sharing ideas and information by buying and selling books, posters and DVDs as workshops take place in the rest of the space. The next day, it’s more workshops, many more.  This is the annual Montreal Anarchist Bookfair, […]

Mask ban protesters take to the streets

Friday, February 27th, 2009

If you thought that the City of Montreal postponing the vote on its controversial anti-mask bylaw would silence the amendment’s opponents, you’d only have to look to the streets Monday night to know how wrong you were. Protesters clad in masks met at Berri Square and after a speech took to the streets, literally. This […]

Plains of Abraham Aftermath: First Nations Healing Ceremony or Eurocentric debate?

Wednesday, February 25th, 2009

Now that the plan to re-enact the Plains of Abraham colonial war has been canned, a debate is brewing about what should replace the event that was designed to mark the 250 year anniversary. While the National Battlefield Commission is blaming “separatist threats of violence” for the cancellation, it is becoming increasingly clear that there was very little appetite in […]