February 2026: Freedom dreams: A meditation on Black life and loss, and ‘endings that are not over’

Delia

“In the diaspora, as in bad dreams, you are constantly overwhelmed by the persistence of the spectre of captivity.”

Dionne Brand, 2001, A map to the door of no return, p. 29.

We inherit the legacies of that which has come before.

My last name, Douglas, is Scottish.

It is the name of a plantation owner.

As a descendant of the enslaved, I am part of the Black diaspora that is the result of the trans-Atlantic Slave trade that kidnapped, exiled, and relocated peoples of African descent to stolen Indigenous lands across the Americas.

I am here because of my ancestors’ fierceness, courage, determination, and sacrifices.

I strive to honour their rebellious lives and embody their wildest dreams.

In thinking about the link between past injustices and present violences and inequities, I am thinking about how history is alive, and that forgetting, and remembering, are ongoing racial gender sexual projects.

In thinking through the relationship between our racial past and present, I have found sociologist Avery Gordon’s notion of “haunting,” very helpful. Gordon uses the term to establish a link to the “living effects, seething and lingering, of what seems over and done with, the endings that are not over” (p. 195). 

Black life in the diaspora is inextricably linked to the ever-evolving reverberations of Atlantic chattel enslavement, and its inimitable scale of amassing persons, and the inordinate violence and death involved to generate wealth (Hartman).

This month I have been reflecting on our inheritance in the context of a past that is in fact not past, to consider what remains in an era that Saidiya Hartman has brilliantly described as the “afterlife of slavery.”

According to Hartman, the afterlife of slavery refers to the fact that “Black lives are still imperiled and devalued by a racial calculus and a political arithmetic that were entrenched centuries ago. This is the afterlife of slavery – skewed life chances, limited access to health and education, premature death, incarceration, and impoverishment. I, too, am the afterlife of slavery” (p. 6).

Black folx carry the imprint of the commodity – the difficulty of breath, gratuitous violence, denial of our personhood, and lack of bodily autonomy (including but not limited to autonomy from state violence, and autonomy regarding sexuality, gender identity, and expression).

In particular, the presence of people of African descent throughout the Americas what Bonita Lawrence and Zeinab Amadahy describe as “stolen people on stolen land” (p. 125).

For peoples of African descent, a sense of belonging remains a contested and ongoing site of struggle.

Returning to Dionne Brand, we remain affected by the unrelenting threat of captivity via the myriad restraints and constraints that seek to confine and/or exclude us from society.

In addition to mortality, there is the loss of jobs, of opportunity, of safety and stability, of home, of homelands, of misrecognition, the denial of dignity, of our humanness.

All told, the losses are innumerable and ever present, existing along a scale that cannot be easily conveyed owing to the various conditions and identities that structure the diverse experiences of Black folx.

Given our distinct relationship to property and its consequences, we are summoned to different things, and the exigency is uneven.

Alongside inconceivable registers of loss and grief and the most recent iteration of the movement for Black lives…

What remains is love, hope, freedom dreams, and refusal.

Hope and love underwrite our determined efforts, to imagine, dream, and build a world that “might be otherwise.”

We are because of our ancestors, known and unknown.

We have never stopped resisting.

We have never accepted our abjection.

In the spaces through which we travel, we continue to ‘make ourselves known’ (Fanon).

We live

We love

            We dance

                        We laugh

We refuse

We rise….


Resources

Amadahy, Zeinab, & Lawrence, Bonita. (2009). Indigenous peoples and Black people in Canada: Settlers or allies? In A. Kempf (Ed.), Breaching the colonial contract: Anti-colonialism in the US and Canada (pp. 105-136.). New York: Springer.

Brand, Dionne (2001). A map to the door of no return. Toronto, ON: Doubleday Canada.

Fanon, Franz. (1967). Black skin, white masks. (C. L. Markmann, Trans.). New York, NY: Grove Press.

Gordon, Avery (1998). Ghostly matters: Haunting and the sociological imagination. Minneapolis, MN: University of Minnesota Press.

Hartman, Saidiya V. (2007). Lose your mother: A journey along the Atlantic slave route. New York, NY: Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

February 2024: Black life matters

“Anti-blackness in Canada often goes unspoken. When acknowledged, it is assumed to exist, perhaps, but in another time (centuries ago), or in another place (the United States)” (Robyn Maynard, 2017, p. 3.) Policing Black lives: State violence in Canada from slavery to the present.

Winnipeg, MB: Fernwood Publishing.

Marcia

As Black History Month starts, I’m reflecting on what I was taught about Canada’s history with enslavement in school: that we were the utopian endpoint of the Underground Railroad. It wasn’t until much later in life that my unlearning and relearning happened, often at the expense of the labour of Black friends and scholars like Drs. Delia Douglas, Onye Nnorom, and OmiSoore Dryden. Dr. Douglas is the Director of the Office of Anti-Racism, and Drs. Nnorom and Dryden visited our faculty in 2022, providing education on Anti-Black racism, including the social and physiological health impacts of injustice.

I think about the weight of this labour as Black History Month begins, and knowing how that weight is amplified by ongoing experiences of Anti-Black racism and violence, and the recent tragic killing of Afolabi Stephen Opaso. I am reminded that our collective responsibilities to address Anti-Black racism and enlarge and protect space for Black flourishing last all year long and offer a return to our January blog on rest for those who need a pause from their labour.


Delia

Breathing while Black: Bearing witness

It is Black History Month (BHM) – I regard this month’s blog as an opportunity to have a conversation that needs and deserves space… breathing space – the space that recognition of our humanness demands.

Black History Month 2024 takes place amid the tragic death of Afolabi Stephen Opaso, a 19-year-old student from Nigeria who had been attending the University of Manitoba. Mr.  Opaso had been experiencing a mental health crisis on December 31, 2023, when he was fatally shot by a member of the Winnipeg Police Service (WPS).

Machuar Madut’s family continues to wait for an inquest, five years after Mr. Madut, originally from South Sudan, was fatally shot by a member of the WPS on Feb. 23, 2019. Mr. Madut, aged 43 at the time of his death, had been struggling with mental issues. In 2020 the officer involved was cleared of any wrongdoing. In its final report into Madut’s death, the Independent Investigation Unit of Manitoba said it found the use of lethal force by the officer was “reasonable, necessary, justified and unavoidable.”

According to a WPS spokesperson use of lethal force is justified when the life of an officer or other person is in immediate danger, or the police member or another person is in immediate danger of grievous bodily harm.

Keep in mind that Black folx are overrepresented in use of force, fatal shootings, and enforcement arrests, and charge rates in Canada.

In 2016 a UN Report from the Working Group of Experts on People of African Descent on its mission to Canada expressed their trepidation about police involved deaths of at-risk peoples of African descent who were experiencing a mental health crisis.

Breathing is necessary to life.

Anti-Black racism(s) is part of local/regional/national/global political landscapes.

In enslavement’s afterlife Black folx continue to struggle to breathe. Is it any wonder that Black people cannot live, owing to white supremacy and anti-Black racism given that breath is required for life?

2020 was both a moment and a movement. Following George Floyd’s murder, tens of thousands marched across the United States, in support of Black Lives Matter (BLM), and inspired global protests against police brutality, anti-Black racism, and racial injustice. Across Canada people organized and gathered to stand in solidarity with Mr. Floyd’s family and the Black Lives Matter movement, drawing attention to racialized police violence, systemic racism, and inequality. In Winnipeg, Justice 4 Black Lives organized a rally called for justice an end to state violence and racial injustice which thousands attended. 

Reflecting B(l)ack

Black status and identity in Canada are linked to the country’s history of enslavement – of state sanctioned authorization and use of anti-Black racial violence.

The Atlantic slave trade involved the forced removal of millions of Africans which created a diaspora. The trade was fundamental to the economic and industrial development of Europe and North America, and the simultaneous under-development of Africa. Canada benefitted from the enslavement of Africans through profits accrued by the Hudson’s Bay trading company and the fur trade, and by the British Empire through traders of sugar, cotton, and the wealth generated by the colonies throughout the Americas. Settler colonial dispossession of the ancestral and traditional lands of Indigenous peoples was funded in part through the labour of enslaved peoples of African descent. The end of enslavement was followed by other manifestations of anti-Black racism such as racial segregation in schools, housing, and employment, the desecration of slave cemeteries in Ontario and Québec, and cross burnings on the property of Black families in Nova Scotia, Manitoba, and New Brunswick.

B(l)ack to the future: Moving forward

We inherit the legacy of that which has come before.

Knowing our racial past helps us to understand our racial present. It also encourages us to imagine/dream/desire and build our futures ….

I stand on the shoulders of many who have gone before – known and unknown. My father, the late Dr. Lawrence F. Douglas, is one person whose shoulders helped lift me to where I am today.

My father was a single parent and the most influential person in my life.

He was also the first Black faculty member in the Department of Sociology at the U of M, and one of its four founding members. He retired in 1989 after 22 years of teaching. The Department would not hire another tenure track Black faculty member, for 32 years: Dr. Joseph Asomah.

Representation matters.

Fast forward: of the nearly 50 000 faculty that work across the 40 post-secondary institutions in Canada, there are approximately 900 Black faculty @ 300 of which are Black women…Black – and Indigenous peoples – are the most underrepresented Faculty in Canadian post-secondary institutions.

Racial equity matters.

In 2021 UM Law alumnus, David Sowemimo, established the David Sowemimo Law Entrance Scholarship awarded annually to Black undergraduate students enrolled full-time in the juris doctor program in UM’s Faculty of Law. It was the first scholarship of its kind at U of M.

Over the course of the past year, I have been working with Ekong Udobang in Donor Relations, to create a Fellowship in perpetuity for Black graduate students in the Department of Sociology and Criminology. The Dr. Lawrence F. Douglas Fellowship will be awarded for the first time in 2024-2025 academic year.

The Fellowship is a way for me to honour my father, and it is also an opportunity to pay it forward, to offer dedicated support to Black graduate students in their academic journey.

Where is the love?

The project of anti-racism is incomplete without addressing anti-Black racism(s). Nearly 4 years have passed since the events of 2020 – in many ways it seems like a lifetime ago. To paraphrase Janet Jackson – what have you done… lately? Or, more to the point, what will you do?

Breathing is necessary to life.

I can’t breathe

Is a proclamation…
A declaration…
A metaphor for the wounds/harms/effects of racism.
I can’t breathe is also
A protest statement,
and
A call to action…

         If not now, then when?


Resources

Dunn, T. (5 April, 2018). In deadly encounters with Toronto police more than a third of victims are Black. CBC. Available at https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/police-deaths-blacks-data-1.4599215.

Olynick, H. (2021). UM Today. Alumnus creates scholarship for Black students. Available at https://news.umanitoba.ca/alumnus-creates-scholarship-for-black-law-students/.

Petz, S. 2024. (24, January). Nearly 5 years after fatal Winnipeg police shooting, Machuar Madut’s family still waiting for inquest. CBC News. Available at https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba/machuar-madut-family-speaks-inquest-delays-1.7092571.

United Nations report of the working group of experts on people of African descent on its mission to Canada. Available at https://ansa.novascotia.ca/sites/default/files/files/report-of-the-working-group-of-experts-on-people-of-african-descent-on-its-mission-to-canada.pdf.

“We do not accept your apology.” (16 June, 2022). CBC. Available at https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/toronto/toronto-police-race-based-data-use-force-strip-searches-1.6489151.