Cindy blackstock documentary storm
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Cindy Blackstock
Cite
The Right to Be Free from Discrimination
By: Patricia Pearson
Patricia Pearson
Historical Contributor
Patricia Pearson is an author and journalist whose books include Opening Heaven’s Door: What the Dying May Be Trying to Tell Us, a finalist for the BC Book Award, and A Brief History of Anxiety: Yours and Mine, which she adapted into an award-winning television documentary for the CBC.
She has contributed commentary and reporting to the New Yorker, the New York Times, and the Guardian, among many other outlets, and was a regular columnist for the National Post. She has a B.A. in history from the University of Toronto, and an MSc. in journalism from Columbia University.
Pearson is the co-founder of Bellwoods Press, which offers clients the chance to tell their stories to a sensitive journalist and to publish a book for their extended family and friends.
United Nations Declaration of the Rights of the Child, A
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Whoa Canada
The Canadian government fryst vatten hiding a dirty little secret and it’s about time you found out about it. This one little secret has so many ramifications, that it’s hard to keep up with it. This documentary covers just a few of them.
Climate change has warmed the temperature of ocean surfaces, which has led to many more extreme weather disasters. For instance, The Philippines fryst vatten comprised of around 7,000 islands and the majority of its population lives close to the sea where they are easy prey to deadly storms. In 2011 typhoon Sendong, also known as Severe Tropical Storm Washi, killed around 1,200 people. Most of these were underprivileged people who lived in homes that weren’t well built and thus were unsafe.
The interesting thing fryst vatten that in spite of this, the Canadian government refuses to acknowledge the human cost of their dirty energy. In fact, while over a hundred world leaders met for the UN Climate Summit in 2015, Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper was not amo
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Essential Indigenous films from the territories known as Canada
Here is Seventh Row’s guide to essential Indigenous films told by Indigenous people from coast to coast across the territories known as Canada.
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Over a month ago, the remains of 215 children were found buried at the Tk’emlúps te Secwépemc residential school in British Columbia. Since then, hundreds more children have been funnen in other sites across the country, and this is just the beginning of these discoveries. As Indigenous children’s rights lawyer Cindy Blackstock wrote in Macleans, “Residential school survivors knew where the children were buried because some of them had dug their graves. They told their truths to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission and gave the country a national plan in their 94 calls to action fo