The killing of George Floyd, the coronavirus pandemic and climate change.
Three crises, linked by the common threads of inequality and systemic racism.
Consider these facts: across Canada, Black people are disproportionately the targets of street checks by police. In Toronto, Black neighbourhoods have been hardest hit by COVID-19. In Nova Scotia, a Black community was exposed to toxic waste for decades.
“This is about vulnerability and how some people are exposed to some of these issues or oppressions more than others,” says Ingrid Waldron, a professor at Dalhousie University and the author of There's Something in the Water: Environmental Racism in Indigenous and Black Communities.
George Floyd’s killing in Minnesota has sparked protests against police violence across the globe, including in Canada. It has also prompted conversations about race, diversity and injustices in all facets of life, including the ways in which we experience our natural world.
Not only are Black and Indigenous people disproportionately affected by the climate crisis, but research has shown that visible minorities are also more likely than white people to be concerned about global warming.
“Black and Indigenous people are not on the minds of white people,” Ingrid tells The Narwhal. That ignorance, she notes, is rooted in denial — and it amounts to terror.
“The killing of Black bodies is horrible. But telling Black people you don’t see it? That is white terror,” she says.
“And if you don’t get it, you can continue profiting — in the case of environmental racism — keep benefiting. A lot of it is privilege. You have to start to share, you have to give up some of that privilege.”
“We need white people to do that work.”
At The Narwhal, we recognize that we have a responsibility to address and help correct inequalities in Canadian journalism and Canadian society. We are committed to building a team that reflects the communities we serve, and to ground our reporting in respect for Indigenous knowledge and Indigenous rights.
We know there is plenty of more work to do. And we are always willing to listen. Please don’t hesitate to call us out on our blind spots and This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. where we can do better.
Arik Ligeti
Audience Engagement Editor
This week in The Narwhal
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By Julien Gignac
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By Peter Mather
By Stephanie Wood
The Canadian Association of Journalists has recognized photographer Amber Bracken for her exceptional coverage of the Wet’suwet’en crisis in The Narwhal, praising her “moral courage” in defending the public’s right to know. (That’s her photo above of the RCMP preparing to arrest Unist’ot’en spokesperson Freda Huson.)“You are what our society needs right now: find the facts, explain the details, point out the trade-offs and simply tell us like it is. THANK YOU!” — Catarina, a new Narwhal donor. Thank you for your support!
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