African Heritage Month Resources

Reading Resources

Report on Lord Dalhousie’s History of Slavery and Race

A must-read for any Dalhousie Student. Anti-Black Racism is embedded into Dalhousie as an institution on a fundamental level. Written by Dr. Afua Cooper, former Halifax poet Laureate and current faculty member at the department of history and Anthropology and Sociology. 

Black Matters by Afua Cooper and Willfried Raussert

A book of photography and poetry written in collaboration by Afua Cooper and photography by Willfried Raussert. Cooper translates Rausserts photos into lyrical and rhythmic verse, discussing the Black diaspora across North America and Europe, putting the past and present into conversation with one another. We have purchased a copy that will be available in the common room to borrow!

Events this Month

African Heritage Month at Dalhousie University

The Office for Equity and Inclusion invites you to join in on Wednesday, February 1, 2023 for the launch of African Heritage Month and flag-raising at Dalhousie University. The event will begin at 11:00 am in the LeMarchant Place atrium with a brief program which will then move to the Studley Quad for the raising of the flag at approximately 11:30 am. We will alternate the flying of the Pan-African flag and African Nova Scotian flag on the Halifax and Truro campuses throughout February. For an overview of Dalhousie and community events happening during African Heritage Month 2023, visit the Human Rights & Equity Services website and/or the Black Cultural Centre website

Downtown Light Show

Throughout February, the Downtown Halifax Business Commission will project light displays on the former Halifax Memorial Library Building at Grafton Park in celebration of African Heritage Month.

Pan-African Flag on Viola Desmond Ferry

Throughout February, the Pan-African flag will be displayed on the Viola Desmond Ferry in honour of African Heritage Month. 

Virtual Museum Tours

Take an immersive tour of popular heritage and cultural sites, including the Africville Museum and the Black Cultural Centre

African Heritage Month – Calypso Celebration | DHBC

Come celebrate and learn about the heritage of Caribbean immigrants to Canada. This event offers a deep dive into the connections between jazz and afro-Caribbean music and its history here in Nova Scotia. It also offers some great tunes! 

Date: Thursday, February 2, 2023

Time: 7:00 p.m.

Location: In-Person and On-Line

Language: Presented in English

Cost: FREE

Lift Every Voice

A showcase of exceptional talent from our African Nova Scotian music community, produced by the African Nova Scotian Music Association. A favourite in Halifax, and a lot of fun. Uplifting, celebratory and engaging. 

Date: Thursday, February 16, 2023 

Time: 6:00 PM – 8:00PM

Location: Halifax North Memorial Public Library 

The NFB in Libraries- African Heritage Month 

A selection of films and documentaries from the National Film Board of Canada. Every Friday morning throughout the month of February; the public library will be screening eye-opening and provoking films to celebrate African Heritage Month. You can chat about the movie afterwards while enjoying some snacks!

Date: Every Friday in February starting February 3rd

Time: 10:00 am- 12:00pm

Location: Captain William Spry Public Library

February 3rd: Sol 

Many Black, racialized, and immigrant women work with elderly patients as healthcare providers. Their jobs, already arduous and underpaid as it is, have become even more exhausting during the COVID-19 pandemic. While some public commentators have described them as over-represented in this sector because of their culture, and hailed them as “guardian angels,” what do they themselves have to say? This cross-sectional portrait of some of these women takes the form of a meditative essay.

February 10th Zab Maboungou 

This portrait of choreographer Zab Maboungou provides insight into the meticulous training and physical strength behind one of her pivotal works: Mozongi.

February 17th Black Soul

Martine Chartrand’s animated short dives into the heart of Black culture with an exhilarating trip through history. Watch as a young boy traces his roots through the stories his grandmother shares with him about the events that shaped their cultural heritage.

February 24th: Ice Breakers

Josh Crooks is a promising teen hockey star in a sport where Black players like him are chronically underrepresented. Ice Breakers reveals the buried history of a pioneering Black hockey league in Atlantic Canada, as Crooks discovers that his unshakable passion is tied to a rich and remarkable heritage

SIMSA EDIA Policy & Digital Land Acknowledgement 

SIMSA would like to direct students’ attention to two new additions to our website. First, on the homepage of the SIMSA website in the “About SIMSA” section, readers will find a Digital Land Acknowledgement, inspired by Data & Society. Additionally, on the “About SIMSA” drop-down tab, SIMSA’s official EDIA Policy can be found between “Positions” and “Social Media Policy”. 

These additions are part of ongoing efforts to embed EDIA policies, language, and considerations in all of SIMSA’s programming, events, and official records to work towards prioritizing equity, diversity, inclusion, accessibility, anti-racism, and decolonization in our organization.

Please get in touch if you have any suggestions, questions, or wish to discuss these additions, please do not hesitate to get in touch with SIMSA at simsa@dal.ca

The Glorious Return of Waffle Wednesday

Pictured above is SIMSA’s wonderful Co-Chair, Courtney! Courtney is a second year MI student and a Reference Intern at the W. K. Kellogg Health Sciences Library at Dalhousie. When Courtney isn’t helping students and faculty with scoping reviews and working on her own projects, she is devoting her time to putting on SIMSA events, like Waffle Wednesday! 

Students and faculty gathered on September 14th for the first Waffle Wednesday of the school year. This month’s flavour was apple cinnamon! New connections were made and old friendships reunited over homemade waffles and hot coffee. SIMSA is hoping to choose a new time to hold this event so that first years have more time to join us around their Wednesday class- stay tuned for updates! 

Waffle Wednesday is the brainchild of Maddie Hare, SIMSA’s EDIA & Special Projects Chair. It first began in the 2022 winter term and Maddie is hoping to cook up waffles on a consistent basis this school year. Waffle Wednesdays usually features “Food for Thought”, an engagement activity that encourages critical reflection on issues of EDIA in our institutions and in Information Management. A reworked version of “Food for Thought” will be launched in October which hopes to provoke greater participation and consideration from all attendees.

Look forward to October for spooky-themed waffles and “Food for Thought”!