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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE RACISM DIFFERENT IN CANADA THAN
IN USA: UNITARIANS March 21 International Day for
Elimination of Racial Discrimination
As part of the continuing process of developing
autonomy, the Canadian Unitarian Council has discerned
that racism in Canada involves some different tensions
than racism in the US. "In the US, racial equality work
tends to focus on tensions between the White majority
and the African-American minority," said CUC President
Elizabeth Bowen. "While there is undoubtedly
discrimination against Black people in Canada, the most
blatant racism tends to be against Aboriginal people and
immigrants."
When asked in a recent survey to name the most
pressing racial issues in their communities, responses
from seven congregations mentioned dicrimination against
First Nations or aboriginal people; three pointed to
treatment of Asian or Indo-Canadian students or
immigrants; and two named discrimination against Black
people. Two congregations said that they had held
special Sunday Services to observe Black History Month.
Unitarians commonly work with inter-faith groups in
their area, which often include immigrant faith groups
such as Buddhists or Muslims. The CUC reached out to
Islamic communities after 9-11, pledging friendship and
support for their right to practice their religion.
"The first step to eliminating racism," said Bowen,
"is to locate it and name it." Since social justice work
is intrinsic to Unitarianism, the CUC encourages all
congregations to analyze and combat racial
discrimination in their own communities and to recognize
how racism plays out differently in Canada than in the
US.
The Canadian Unitarian Council/Conseil unitarien du
Canada (CUC), is an association of forty-four
congregations located across Canada with 5,200
individual members. Arising out of the work of outspoken
reformers and dissenters within the Christian tradition
five centuries ago, the Unitarian movement today
includes Universalists and flows in a broad religious
stream augmented by Humanist, earth-centred, Buddhist
and other progressive beliefs.
For more information, contact: Elizabeth Bowen,
President, Canadian Unitarian Council, 613-236-4504
Email:
elizabeth@cuc.ca
Rev. J. McRee (Mac) Elrod 250-474-3361 Email:
mac@slc.bc.ca
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