Rallies, Rest and Resilience
Listen in on conversations with Black women who are processing what this moment in the fight against anti-Black racism means to them.
Black women in Canada share what this moment in the fight against anti-Black racism means to them
As protests against anti-Black racism and police brutality continue to happen across the country, in the United States, and all over the world, conversations about race are at the forefront now more than ever.
CBC Saskatchewan reporter Omayra Issa joins host Ify Chiwetelu for this episode of Now or Never. We invite you to pull up a chair and listen in on conversations with Black women who are processing what this moment in the fight for racial justice means to them.
- Winnipeg criminal lawyer Zilla Jones questions her role in the justice system, and the future of her two young sons.
- 15-year old Chloe Ngakosso is normally very shy but lately she's been finding her voice, and aiming it directly at her Ontario school board.
- Uwayo Dushime is a proud trans woman and a passionate activist, who's finding herself searching for optimism in a moment that feels all too familiar.
- Miali Coley-Sudlovenick is used to people doing a double-take after seeing her dark skin and then hearing her flawless Inuktitut. She shares her reflections on this moment as a Jamaican-Inuk woman who is exploring the privileges and challenges of her identity.
- Four years ago, Samantha Kemp-Jackson let us eavesdrop on the conversations about race she was having with her young boys. Today, they're both 11 and the conversations now are turning to police brutality.