Monday, March 21, 2022

The Ukrainian Jew who saved Yiddish music from oblivion

By ANDREW SILOW-CARROLL / JTA 
© (photo credit: REUTERS/STRINGER) Local residents walk near residential buildings which were damaged during Ukraine-Russia conflict in the besieged southern port city of Mariupol, Ukraine March 18, 2022.

Late last year, months before a Russian missile landed near the Babyn Yar memorial outside of Kyiv, Ukraine, the site’s foundation announced plans for a new museum to honor the 33,771 Jews slaughtered there by the Nazis in September 1941.

Natan Sharansky, chair of the memorial’s supervisory board, described Babyn Yar as a “symbol of attempts to destroy the memory of the Holocaust,” and that the new institution would be called the Museum of the History of Oblivion.

“The History of Oblivion” would make an appropriate alternative title for “Song Searcher,” a new documentary about Moyshe Beregovsky, the Jewish folklorist and ethnomusicologist who traveled his native Ukraine in the 1930s and ’40s collecting Yiddish folk music and klezmer songs. Before World War II, Beregovsky shlepped primitive recording equipment on his visits to then still vital shtetls throughout the region. During and after the war, he found and interviewed residents and survivors of ghettos in Chernivtsi and Vinnytsia.

The voices that he captured are heard on 1,017 scratchy wax cylinders that for a long time many feared were lost. The film details how they and other materials were recovered and made their way to the Vernadsky National Library of Ukraine. They are a treasure trove for scholars and musicians who want to preserve and resurrect a culture that was nearly wiped out.

“Nobody else did any projects like this, of collecting that much music and writing that much about it,” Mark Slobin, an American ethnomusicologist, says in the film. Slobin’s collections of Beregovsky’s work were key to the klezmer revival of the past 40 years.” “Nobody did a project like that in Poland when the culture was alive. Nobody did it in these other places where the Jews lived. So it stands as a monument not just to where he worked in Ukraine, but for the whole population of Eastern European Jewish culture
© Provided by The Jerusalem Post
 Moyshe Beregovsky is seen with various documents and sheet music collected in his vast archive of Yiddish folk and klezmer songs.
 (credit: COURTESY JEWISH MUSIC FORUM)

Various klezmer musicians are seen in the film, playing the songs that Beregovsky collected. Many of the songs reflect the misery of the Jewish experience under the Soviets, the Nazis and the Soviets again. Even a so-called “humorous” song – sung here by Psoy Korolenko, a puckish Yiddish singer from Russia – is a revenge fantasy about confronting Hitler after the war.

(Korolenko and Toronto Yiddish scholar Anna Shternshis, who is featured prominently in the film, will discuss Yiddish music and humor during World War II in a virtual Jewish Music Forum event on Monday night. “Song Searcher” is doing the Jewish festival circuit and will start virtual screenings next week.)

The film never loses sight, however, of the incalculable human toll of the Holocaust in Ukraine. Survivors who were children during the war tell of the horrors of the forced marches, the suffering in the ghettos and the grim fate of the Jews in Transnistria, who were spared the concentration camps but were starved and shot to death by German and Romanian occupiers.

There are also rare color photographs of the slaughter at Babyn Yar, one of many moments when the pictures and stories of trapped civilians and desperate refugees blur with this morning’s headlines out of Ukraine.

But the history, like today’s headlines, is head-swirling as you try to keep track of the shifting occupations and the various degrees of villainy. The Soviets are celebrated as the liberators of Auschwitz, but almost immediately turn on the Jews. Their targets included Beregovsky, who by this time had founded or led a slew of important and perfectly legal academic institutions in Russia and Ukraine: a Cabinet for Research on Jewish Literature, Language, and Folklore; the Archives for Jewish Folk Music; the Cabinet for Music Ethnography and Audio Recording at the Kyiv Conservatory. He had even received his Ph.D. from the Moscow Conservatory, with a dissertation on Jewish instrumental folk music.

By 1949, such Jewish ethnic activities were considered “cosmopolitan” by the Soviets, and Beregovsky was shipped off to Siberia, where he joined other slave laborers in building a railroad. Already a grandfather, he found some solace in leading the prison camp’s choir, and the film includes snippets of letters he wrote home to his wife Sara in Kyiv, asking her to send – what else – sheet music.

Beregovsky was able to return to Kyiv after the death of Stalin, where, before cancer would kill him in 1961, he was able to arrange his private archive.

What was preserved? What was lost? And what might still be lost as the current war grinds on? Much of the film was shot in Ukraine in 2019 and 2020, with the camera lingering on Kyiv’s pastel-colored academic buildings, the lazy Dnipro River and the waving wheat in the country’s breadbasket. You recall this is a “pre-war” Ukraine, and then realize you are thinking back about three and half weeks.

Jews have a complicated history with Ukraine. (How complicated? The filmmakers acknowledge the “generous support” of Roman Abramovich, the Russian Jewish oligarch who is being hit with a slew of international sanctions thanks to his close ties with Vladimir Putin.) Perhaps one and a half million Jews were killed there. They were the victims of the Nazis, but also of the Germans’ local collaborators. Once home to the second-largest Jewish population in Europe, and still a place where over 40,000 Jews live, the country can also be seen as a vast Jewish graveyard. And yet its Jewish culture was as central to the country’s identity and self-understanding as it was to the Jews, as scholars in the film explain.

As I write this, Ukrainian culture as a whole is literally under fire. A museum was razed in Ivankiv. Kharkiv’s Central Square is a war zone. Lviv is bracing for the worst by packing sandbags around public sculptures and hiding museum collections.

“The heritage war for identity means that the target is not only territory or some military or civil objects,” Ihor Poshyvalio, the director of the Maidan Museum in Kyiv, told PBS NewsHour Thursday. “The target is our historical memory, our cultural traditions, our national and individual identity, our memory and identity as a nation.”

The historical memory of the Jews was only saved from oblivion by the survivors, and by a dogged little man who was rewarded for his troubles with a prison term. “Song Searcher” ends on a note that is neither hopeful nor despairing – or maybe it is both: Igor Polesitsky, a violist and klezmer from Florence, sits near the graves of his slain Jewish relatives in Kalinindorf, once a Jewish agricultural colony in southern Ukraine.


“Look around here, there’s nothing Jewish remaining,” he says, after playing a requiem preserved by Beregovsky. “The one thing that truly remains is what was saved by Moyshe Beregovsky. So his archive is what brings us here, and we become a link with the spirit of people who are no longer with us.” The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of JTA or its parent company, 70 Faces Media.

 
A Klezmer Karnival – Philip Sparke
Hal Leonard Europe Concert Band
Klezmer music originated in the ‘shtetl’ (villages) and the ghettos of Eastern Europe, where itinerant Jewish troubadours, known as ‘klezmorim’, had performed at celebrations, particularly weddings, since the early Middle Ages. Since the 16th century, lyrics had been added to klezmer music, due to the ‘badkhn’ (the master of ceremony at weddings), to the ‘Purimshpil’ (the play of Esther at Purim) and to traditions of the Yiddish theatre, but the term gradually became synonymous with instrumental music, particularly featuring the violin and clarinet. In recent years it has again become very popular and in A Klezmer Karnival Philip Sparke has used three contrasting traditional tunes to form a suite that will bring a true karnival atmosphere to any concert.
AMP 124-010

 
Goodbye Odessa - Yiddish Song
Olga Mieleszczuk

Vocal: Olga Avigail Mieleszczuk, violin: Daniel Hoffman, clarinet: Ittai Binnun, accordion: Ofer Malchin, contrabass: Yehonatan Levi
record and sound: Ittai Binnun / Lars Sergel, mastering: Marek Walaszek
Oh Odessa, goodbye Odessa,
I will miss you so much,
I will never forget you,
Farewell my friends,
Let's shout together:
Odessa Mama, I love you so much!
This Yiddish-Ukrainian song "Proshchai Odessa" was sung by Pesakh Burstein. I've combined it with a Ukrayinish Kek-Vok (Ukrainian Cakewalk) collected by Yale Strom.

A SPECIAL TREAT LED ZEPPLIN'S IMMIGRANT SONG
338Canada: A tale of two premiers
Philippe J. Fournier 13 hrs ago

When Jason Kenney lead his brand new United Conservative Party to a decisive majority victory in April 2019, some observers (yours truly included) wondered whether Alberta had just entered a new era of political dynasty. It wasn’t a far-fetched scenario: Even by earning more votes in absolute numbers in 2019 than in 2015, Rachel Notley’s NDP went for a majority at the Alberta legislature to the opposition benches with only 24 seats (almost entirely from urban Alberta). With the benefit of hindsight, it now appears obvious that the NDP simply did not stand a chance of winning the 2019 election against a single, united conservative opponent.

© Used with permission of / © St. Joseph Communications.
 Legault chairs a premiers news conference as premiers John Horgan, Kenney, and Scott Moe appear onscreen, on March 4, 2021 in Montreal (Ryan Remiorz/CP)

Mere months later, Andrew Scheer’s CPC won a stunning 69 per cent of the vote in Alberta in the 2019 federal election. It therefore appeared like an obvious understatement to say that Alberta conservatives had fully regained control of the political landscape of the province, and perhaps this new right-of-centre creature lead by Jason Kenney could potentially dominate the province for years to come.

In Quebec, François Legault’s Coalition Avenir Québec (CAQ) had, just six months prior, broken a half-century cycle in Quebec politics by winning a majority at the National Assembly, inflicting both the Quebec Liberals and Parti Québécois the worst defeats in their history. Legault, himself a former prominent PQ MNA, lead his party to victory by taking the middle road between two foes still deeply committed to fighting “La question nationale”, which, polls have indicted, many Quebecers feel is yesterday’s battle.

Legault’s victory in 2018 culminated a decade of high political volatility in Quebec. Three straight provincial elections featuring the same three parties had resulted in three different winners (PQ in 2012, Liberals in 2014, and CAQ in 2018). On the federal front, Quebec voters had overwhelmingly supported Gilles Duceppe’s Bloc Québécois in the 2008 federal election, only to turn massively towards Jack Layton’s NDP in 2011, and then elected 40 MPs from Justin Trudeau’s Liberals in 2015.

Yet, with only six months before Quebec voters go to the polls (the Quebec general election is scheduled for Oct. 3, 2022), Legault’s position is, according to recent polling, more comfortable than any sitting Quebec premier since Robert Bourassa in 1989.

To wit: The latest 338Canada projection in Quebec gives the CAQ the edge in 97 of the province’s 125 electoral districts, a total well above the 63-seat threshold for a majority at the National Assembly. Unless the CAQ performs a nosedive of historic proportion in the coming months, Legault should handily win a second straight majority this fall.



© Provided by Maclean's

The CAQ domination is such that most storylines about the Quebec election revolve around which party shall occupy the opposition benches, and which could even be virtually wiped off the Quebec map. The Quebec Liberals still rely on many safe Montreal seats where most non-francophone voters live and have historically been reliable Liberal supporters, but even this support may be dwindling. The latest Léger poll has the Liberals in fifth place among francophone voters, and measures a softening of non-francophone support for the Liberals.

The same Léger poll had Quebec Liberal leader Dominique Anglade as the favourite candidate for premier by 9 per cent of respondents—including a measly 4 per cent among francophone voters. Whatever Anglade is selling, most Quebecers aren’t buying, even several traditionally reliable Liberal voters. This only adds to Legault’s apparent aura of invincibility.

The contrast with Jason Kenney and the UCP could hardly be starker. Not only has the Alberta premier accumulated a long string of poor approval numbers since the pandemic reached our shores in the spring of 2020, the UCP has trailed the NDP in voting intentions in virtually all publicly released polls since December 2020 (a private poll from Janet Brown Opinion Research leaked by the UCP last week showed a modest rebound for the UCP). Moreover, the latest round of premier approvals by the Angus Reid Institute has Kenney at 30 per cent approval among Alberta voters, second last of the list of Premiers in Canada (only Manitoba’s new Premier Heather Stefanson fared worse than Kenney).

Using the available data, the 338Canada Alberta model measures the NDP and UCP in a dead heat in the seat projection: 44 seats for the NDP and 43 for the UCP, both numbers bearing wide confidence intervals. If an election was held this week, the projection would have been the very definition of a toss up between the main parties:



© Provided by Maclean's

Former Wildrose leader Brian Jean’s comfortable victory in the Fort McMurray-Lac La Biche by-election last week only muddies the water further for Kenney. While Jean’s by-election win was not a surprise, his clearly stated objective of unseating Kenney at the UCP convention in Red Deer next months adds to the unfolding drama. Party organizers expect more than 10,000 UCP members to show up and vote on Kenney’s leadership, so not only do we wonder whether Kenney could beat Notley in a general election rematch, but it looks far from certain whether Kenney will manage to dodge this friendly fire and get to lead his party.

Contrast this with the Marie-Victorin by-election taking place in Quebec on April 11, where neophyte CAQ candidate Shirley Dorismond, a former nurse and union leader, has had to backtrack on several comments critical of Legault’s CAQ that she made before running for the CAQ. Dorismond had been especially outspoken on systemic racism, which the CAQ does not recognize exists in Quebec. As union leader, she butted heads with the CAQ government on union negotiation on several occasions. Despite all this, Dorismond was all smiles when she was introduced by Legault last month and promised “to be part of the solution.”

We are witnessing a fascinating tale of two Premiers: While Legault was elected in a period of political chaos and tumult in Quebec, he has so far succeeded in calming the storm, and even convinced former foes to kiss his ring. Meanwhile, Kenney’s UCP victory in 2019 had the air of a return to conservative hegemony in Alberta, but is now forced to welcome a new MLA in his caucus who won his seat largely by publicly saying he will work to boot the premier out of office.
'Dune' Wins Top Award From American Society of Cinematographers

Steve Pond 2

"Dune" has been named the best-shot film of 2021 by the American Society of Cinematographers, which held its annual awards show on Sunday evening in Los Angeles.
© Provided by TheWrap

Cinematographer Greig Fraser won the award over a field that included fellow Oscar nominees "The Power of the Dog," "The Tragedy of Macbeth" and "Nightmare Alley," as well as "Belfast."

In the first 35 years of its existence, the ASC winner has gone on to take the Oscar for Best Cinematography less than half the time, although that percentage has improved recently. "Dune" is considered one of the front runners for this year's cinematography Oscar, with Fraser seemingly in a close with Ari Wegner for "The Power of the Dog," who could be the first woman ever to win.

Other feature-film awards went to Jessica Beshir for "Faya Dayi" in the documentary category and Pat Scola for "Pig" in the spotlight category, which is designed for films with limited or film-festival distribution.

The ASC also gave out awards in four television categories. James Laxton won in the Motion Picture, Limited Series or Pilot Made for Television category for "The Underground Railroad," Tommy Maddox-Upshaw won for "Snowfall" and Jon Joffins won for "Titans" in the commercial and non-commercial one-hour series categories, respectively, and Michael Berlucci and Marc Carter won for "Mythic Quest" in the half-hour series category.

Honorary award recipients included Ellen Kuras, the first female cinematographer to be given the ASC's Lifetime Achievement Award, who received her honor from Rachel Morrison, who was herself the first woman ever nominated for the ASC film award and the cinematography Oscar. Other recipients were Peter Levy, who received the Career Achievement in Television Award; John Lindley, who received the President's Award; and Dan Sasaki, who received the Curtis Clark Technical Achievement Award.

The ceremony was hosted by Debbie Allen from the ASC Clubhouse in Hollywood, but was also streamed live.

Here is the list of ASC Award nominees. Winners are indicated by **WINNER.

Feature Film

Bruno Delbonnel, ASC, AFC for "The Tragedy of Macbeth"

** WINNER Greig Fraser, ASC, ACS for "Dune"

Dan Laustsen, ASC, DFF for "Nightmare Alley"

Ari Wegner, ACS for "The Power of the Dog"

Haris Zambarloukos, BSC, GSC for "Belfast"

Spotlight

Ruben Impens, SBC for "Titane"

** WINNER Pat Scola for "Pig"

Adolpho Veloso, ABC for "Jockey"



Gallery: Critics' Choice 2022: Hosts, Special Awards and More to Know (US Weekly)


Documentary

** WINNER Jessica Beshir for "Faya Dayi"

Isabel Bethencourt and Parker Hill for "Cusp"

Daniel Schönauer for "The Hidden Life of Trees"

Motion Picture, Limited Series, or Pilot Made for Television

Steve Annis for "Foundation" - Pilot Episode: "The Emperor's Peace"

Tim Ives, ASC for "Halston" - Episode: "The Party's Over"

** WINNER James Laxton, ASC for "The Underground Railroad" - Episode: "Chapter 9: Indiana Winter"

Christophe Nuyens, SBC for "Lupin" - Pilot Episode: "Chapter 1"

Ben Richardson, ASC for "Mare of Easttown" - Episode: "Illusions"

Episode of a One-Hour Television Series - Non-Commercial

Stuart Biddlecombe for "The Handmaid's Tale" - Episode: "The Wilderness"

David Garbett for "Sweet Tooth" - Episode: Big Man

David Greene, ASC, CSC for "Chapelwaite" - Episode: "The Promised"

** WINNER Jon Joffin, ASC for "Titans" - Episode: "Souls"

Boris Mojsovski, ASC, CSC for "Titans" - Episode:"Home"

Kate Reid, BSC for "The Nevers" - Episode: "Hanged"

Episode of a One-Hour Television Series - Commercial

Thomas Burstyn, CSC, NZSC for "Snowpiercer" - Episode: "Our Answer for Everything"

** WINNER Tommy Maddox-Upshaw, ASC for "Snowfall" - Episode: "Weight"

Ronald Paul Richard for "Riverdale" - Episode: "Chapter Eighty-Nine: Reservoir Dogs"

Brendan Steacy, CSC for "Clarice" - Episode: "Silence is Purgatory"

David Stockton, ASC for "Mayans M.C." - Episode: "The Orneriness of Kings"

Gavin Struthers, ASC, BSC for "Superman & Lois" - Episode: "Heritage"

Episode of a Half-Hour Television Series

Marshall Adams, ASC for "Servant" - Episode: "2:00"

** WINNER Michael Berlucchi and Marc Carter for "Mythic Quest" - Episode: "Backstory!"

Adam Bricker for "Hacks" - Episode: "There is No Line"

Paula Huidobro for "Physical" - Episode: "Let's Get Together"

Jaime Reynoso, AMC for "The Kominsky Method" - Episode: "And it's Getting More and More Absurd"

Lifetime Achievement Award: Ellen Kuras, ASC

Career Achievement in Television Award: Peter Levy, ASC, ACS

President's Award: John Lindley, ASC

Curtis Clark Technical Achievement Award: Dan Sasaki
YOU DON'T KNOW JACK
Adrien Brody Says Jack Nicholson Asked Him To Boycott The 2003 Oscars Over The U.S. Invasion Of Iraq

Sarah Curran

Adrien Brody is looking back on the 2003 Academy Awards.
© Photo: Tommaso Boddi/Getty Images Adrien Brody

In a new interview with the Sunday Times, the actor recalled how his fellow Best Actor nominee Jack Nicholson asked him to boycott the ceremony in order to take a stand against the U.S. invasion of Iraq.

Brody said that Nicolson invited all that year's Best Acting nominees to attend a get-together at his home, including Nicolas Cage, Michael Caine and Daniel Day-Lewis.

"I said, ‘I don’t know about you guys, but I’m going,’” he rememebered. “I said, ‘I kind of have to show up. My parents are coming. This doesn’t come around too often. I know you guys are all winners. You can sit it out. But I can’t.’”

Brody went on to become the youngest person ever to win the Best Actor award, thanks to his performance in "The Pianist".

However, the then 29-year-old was sure to mention the situation in Iraq in his acceptance speech.

"I'm filled with a lot of sadness tonight because I'm accepting an award at such a strange time," he said. "My experience of making this film made me very aware of the sadness and the dehumanization of people at the times of war, and the repercussions of war."

WAIT, WHAT?
‘West Side Story’ Star Rachel Zegler Says She’s ‘Not Invited’ To The Oscars

Sarah Curran 
© Dominik Bindl/Getty Images Rachel Zegler.

Rachel Zegler has apparently been left off the guest list for this year's Oscars.

The "West Side Story" star made the revelation while responding to a comment beneath her latest Instagram post.

"Can't wait to see what you'll be wearing on Oscar night," wrote one fan beneath a slideshow of photos from the first quarter of Zegler's whirlwind year.

"i'm not invited so sweatpants and my boyfriend's flannel," said Zegler in response. "i hope some last minute miracle occurs and i can celebrate our film in person but hey, that's how it goes sometimes, i guess."

"West Side Story" will be up for a number of awards at next Sunday's ceremony, including Best Director and Best Picture

Zegler previously represented the movie at the Critics Choice Awards and the BAFTAs.

Pro-COVID mandate rallies held in Saskatchewan
Taz Dhaliwal
© Global News Saskatoon Residents in both Regina and Saskatoon gathered for pro-public health COVID mandate rallies Saturday afternoon.

Concerned citizens across Saskatchewan with a group called Take Action Against COVID or TAAC are advocating for pro-public health COVID-19 mandates to be reinstated, as the COVID-19 pandemic is still ongoing.

On Saturday afternoon, TAAC members voiced their frustrations in regards to what they're calling inaction from the Saskatchewan government when it comes to continuing to protect residents — especially the most vulnerable, who may be immuno-compromised — with COVID health measures.

“At the beginning, remember when everybody was applauding health-care workers? Well now it's shut up and go to work, and that's acceptable,” said Judy Henley, CUPE Local 5430, Saskatchewan division president at the Regina rally in front of the legislative building.

Henley who represents public industry workers ranging from education to healthcare and municipalities, said not having any COVID restrictions in place will only further harm the state of public healthcare in the province.

Read more:
COVID-19: 100-plus people gather for pro-mandate protest in Saskatoon

"We have a staffing crisis in healthcare that is absolutely crazy. People are working day in and day out to take care of those in long-term care, in acute and everywhere,” Henley said.

Organizers say there were many supporters who were unable to attend the rallies due to their precarious health situation or that of a close family member's.

“The premier has tried to tell us ... it's time to learn to live with the virus. Or for individuals or families to manage their own risk. But all of the tools we could have used to do that are being yanked away from us,” said Robb Butz, TAAC organizer, who was at the rally in Saskatoon.

Read more:
Majority of Canadians support more COVID-19 restrictions for unvaccinated: poll

TAAC members and supporters are asking for COVID numbers to be reported daily, access to testing for the public at large and indoor masking mandates to be implemented once again, along with mandatory sick days.

"Basically it's kind of like survival of the fittest that everybody has to sort out, manage their risk as if we were all able to enter that in the same conditions, as if they're weren't already inequities in place,” said Manuela Vallecastro, a TAAC member also at the protest in Saskatoon.

Things got heated at the rally in Saskatoon when so called "freedom convoy" protestors showed up. There was some pushing between the two groups at one point and police were called.

Shortly after both crowds dispersed.
'What is being hidden?' Curators say Vatican must give access to Indigenous artifacts

Gerald McMaster has always wondered what mysteries and cultural objects are kept within the Vatican’s collection of Indigenous artifacts.


The renowned First Nations curator and artist says the artifacts are important to how Indigenous people see themselves and the world around them. Yet, he says, not many have ever laid their eyes on what's in the vaults.

“What is being hidden? Why is it being hidden?” McMaster pondered in a recent interview with The Canadian Press.

“Why (do) Indigenous people remain shut out whereas the vault will be open to other curators that are non-Indigenous, other European curators."

Indigenous delegates are to meet with Pope Francis at the Vatican the last week in March. The visit is to include a tour of the Anima Mundi Ethnological Museum, which contains an unknown number of Indigenous artifacts.

The Catholic Church has said the delegation’s purpose is to discuss reconciliation and healing, but Indigenous artists and curators say that cannot be achieved if important Indigenous objects remainunseen.

McMaster, who is from the Siksika Nation in Alberta, has been unsuccessful in attempts to see the full collection, despite being a top expert in the field.

He is a 2022 winner of the Governor General's Awards in visual and media arts, a research chair in Indigenous curatorial practice and director of the Centre for Indigenous Visual Knowledge at the Ontario College of Art and Design in Toronto.

McMaster has more than 40 years experience in art, museology and Indigenous esthetics.

“I tried and tried and tried,” McMaster says about his efforts to get access to the Vatican’s collection for his own work with a prestigious international exhibition in 2018.

"I came away from the Vatican completely disappointed. I was unable to ... just connect with anybody, even using Italians who knew people."

The museum was renamed Anima Mundi, meaning "soul of the world," in 2019. At the time, the Pope committed to putting many more objects on display, including those of Indigenous people.

The museum’s website says the artifacts are exhibited on rotation, because they are old and fragile and have extra requirements for their display.

McMaster says keeping the pieces away from the people who created them is a denial of their history. He says Indigenous collections around the world are culturally sensitive and must be treated as such.

Many objects were taken after the Canadian government, through the Indian Act in 1876, outlawed cultural practices, including wearing traditional clothing, he says. Ceremonial items and other important objects were seized, then sold, given to museums or destroyed.

Much of the Vatican's current collection is from a former pope, Pius XI, who decided to hold a world exposition in 1925. A message went out to missionaries around the globe to send items. More than 100,000 objects and works of art ended up on display.

The Vatican says parts of its collection were gifts to popes and the Catholic Church.

Even if items were given willingly, how they are treated and displayed must be done in consultation with Indigenous people, McMaster says.

The collection is known to contain masks, wampum belts, pipes and rugs, and other items from Indigenous communities in North America. Indigenous experts say they don’t have details of the items that have been identified or any idea of how many remain unknown.

"By taking those objects, they are removing our connection, our understanding of the intellectual capacity and intellectual traditions of our ancestors ... the indicators that we ... are connected to specific landscapes,” says Audrey Dreaver, an artist, curator and instructor at the First Nations University of Canada in Regina.

“It really impacts everything and how we feel about ourselves."

Dreaver, who is nehiyiwak (Plains Cree), says it’s much the same as taking cultural objects from and cutting the hair of Indigenous children as they entered residential schools.

It's an intellectual and psychological colonization, she says. The objects themselves are admired, but Indigenous people aren’t considered expert enough to view the artifacts or have them returned.

“They still have a tendency to talk about us like we aren't able to take care of our own cultures and histories.”

Dreaver says reconciliation will not be complete until the Vaticanis honest and open about its Indigenous collection.

Métis artist Christi Belcourt says the matter goes beyond returning art to Indigenous communities.

The Catholic Church is also one of the largest non-governmental landowners in the world, which Belcourt says has given the institution power and wealth.

“Both land and artifacts must be returned to their rightful Indigenous owners around the world.”

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 20, 2022.

Kelly Geraldine Malone, The Canadian Press
Alberta delegation prepares to travel to Vatican to meet Pope Francis

Chris Chacon 

It was an emotional Sunday mass at Sacred Heart Catholic Church of the First Peoples in Edmonton.

© Chris Chacon/Global News Image of Father Susai Jesu.

"We will pray for the success of our delegation and the well-being of all who are going," one parishioner said in a prayer.

The Edmonton church is a national parish for First Nations, Metis and Inuit people and its pastor, alongside Indigenous and non-Indigenous leaders from Alberta and others across Canada are about to travel to the Vatican to meet with Pope Francis.

"April 1st, from 12 p.m. to 1 p.m. is the time general audience, particularity for the primary delegates and secondary delegates directly to meet Pope Francis, that's where I will be meeting him," Father Susai Jesu said.

The visit to Rome was supposed to happen last year following the discoveries of un-marked graves at former residentials schools in Canada.

Read more:
Alberta Indigenous representatives prepare to meet the Pope this month in the Vatican

But the trip was postponed due to the pandemic.

"It's very much needed. It comes to the point where it's almost like a boiling point," Elder Fernie Marty said.

But now it's back on, and Jesu will be representing Sacred Heart as part of the second delegation. And he has a special message for the pope.

"Please come to Canada and be with our people and come to Sacred Heart Church, a national parish, and if possible bless our church. Your presence and prayers will immensely heal millions and millions in Canada," Jesu said.

"For him, that would be the greatest thing to come to Canada and officially make that apology, I believe that would be a godsend, a blessing for all Canadians," Marty said.

An invite to further truth and reconciliation would help heal many people in Alberta, whether the Pope comes to Edmonton or not.

"Our people will always find a way to heal and more forward," Jesu said.

The Alberta delegation is expected to return April 4.
Calgary rally held to push for anti-racism action from all levels of government

Radana Williams

The Peace Bridge was fittingly the location of an anti-racism rally in Calgary Sunday, held to commemorate the United Nations International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination
.
© Global News Indigenous drummers at an anti-racism rally in Calgary Mar. 20, 2022.

Hate crimes rose ‘sharply’ in 2020 despite police-reported crime drop, data shows

Local social justice groups, including the Association of Mexicans in Calgary, Action Dignity and Immigrant Outreach Society gathered to demand concrete actions from the three levels of government to fight systemic and institutional racism.

Organizer Vanesa Ortiz, chair of the Association of Mexicans in Calgary, said much work remains to be done to bring about sustainable and meaningful change at a policy level.

“At the municipal level, implementing the calls to action of the White Goose Flying report,” said Ortiz.

“At the provincial level, to stop scapegoating racialized migrants for the spread of Covid. First the Filipino community, then the southeast Asian community endured racist remarks by Premier Kenney. And on a federal level to keep working to give migrant workers, refugees, dignified working conditions.”

Ortiz added the group wants the city to implement a policy similar to Edmonton’s Access to Municipal Services Without Fear.

“That would ensure that undocumented migrants and people without status or with precarious immigrant status can access services in the city without fear of deportation.”

Read more:
‘Tip of the iceberg’: Why Canada’s online hate-crime data doesn’t tell the full story

Recent data shows Canada saw a 37 per cent increase in hate crimes during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic. Statistics Canada said 2,669 hate crimes were reported to police in 2020 -- the highest number since comparable data became available in 2009.

Statistics Canada said police-reported hate crimes targeting race or ethnicity rose 80 per cent in 2020 compared with 2019 and accounted for the bulk of the national increase.

Reported hate crimes targeting East or Southeast Asian people went up 301 per cent; those aimed at Black people went up 92 per cent; hate against Indigenous people was up 152 per cent; and those against South Asian people went up 47 per cent.

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Disney braces for further walkouts as employees express discontent with CEO Bob Chapek

Analysis by Brian Stelter, 
CNN Business 
RELIABLE SOURCES
 Disney CEO Bob Chapek during an address at the Boston College Chief Executives Club, Monday, Nov. 15, 2021, in Boston. (AP Photo/Charles Krupa)

Disney versus Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis is far from over. And Disney is the state's largest private-sector employer, so this is a battle between giants -- one that DeSantis clearly welcomes as he plots a run for president.

At issue: Florida's Parental Rights in Education bill, dubbed the "Don't Say Gay" bill, that would ban classroom instruction about sexual orientation and gender identity before fourth grade. Disney CEO Bob Chapek tiptoed around the bill at first, was pilloried by employees, and then publicly criticized the bill after it passed the state's legislature. Chapek apologized to LGBTQ employees, but his words did little to lower the temperature. Some employees staged brief walkouts last week, ahead of a "full day walkout" slated to take place on Tuesday.

How many will participate? No one knows. "It's unclear whether it will draw a crowd" among studios employees, CNBC's Julia Boorstin wrote, "as only a fraction of employees have been coming in to work on the lot."

But the earlier walkouts garnered a lot of attention, and "the act of protest will culminate" on Tuesday, as The AP's Mike Schneider put it. Three new stories have outstanding insight into this issue...

Chapek's decision backfired


The WSJ's Robbie Whelan, Erich Schwartzel and Joe Flint nailed it with this lead:

"Chapek made a decision at the start of the year: Disney was staying out of politics. The strategy was meant in part to help the entertainment giant avoid the culture clashes between executives and employees that have plagued many companies in recent years, said people familiar with his thinking. Instead, it backfired."

Chapek's mishandling of the Florida fight "managed to offend both progressives, who wanted the company to do and say more to fight the bill, and conservatives, who wanted Disney to stay out of the debate and now claim it is bowing to liberal agitators within its ranks."

>> Chapek's contract is up for renewal next February, so "several current and former Disney executives described the next 11 months as a critical period for the CEO," the WSJ team added...

Video: Disney CEO sparks controversy by trying to dodge politics (CNN)

The view from Florida


CNN's expert in all things Florida politics, Steve Contorno, is out with an excellent new story about how the Disney dispute has further bolstered DeSantis's standing within the GOP. It has also "exposed a widening chasm between the current crop of Republican leaders and the corporations that have traditionally curried favor with the GOP," Contorno wrote...

>> Christopher Miles, a Miami-based GOP consultant, told Contorno that watching a Florida governor go after Disney was "not a world I expected to be living in a couple of years ago." But DeSantis, like Donald Trump, has gained popularity by bucking conventional wisdom...

Chapek and Iger at odds


In media insider circles, the weekend's #1 read was Alex Sherman's story for CNBC about the falling out between Chapek and his predecessor Bob Iger. It's a rift that now "looms over Disney's future."

In the wake of the Florida debacle, several Disney employees have called Iger "to express their disappointment in Chapek," Sherman reported. But "while public controversies generate headlines, it's likely to be Chapek's internal changes, and how successful they become, that will determine his future as Disney's CEO."

One of the key changes is the elevation of Kareem Daniel, who has profit and loss oversight over Disney's media and entertainment businesses. Daniel has "one of the most powerful jobs ever created in media," Sherman wrote. Daniel has not given any interviews since his October 2020 promotion. Read all about the internal intrigue here...

Moments of silence on ESPN

We noted on Friday that ESPN announcers Carolyn Peck and Courtney Lyle showed solidarity with fellow employees by going silent for two minutes at the start of the NCAA women's tournament. During Sunday's tournament coverage, they did it again, remaining silent "for about two minutes as the South Carolina Gamecocks and the Miami Hurricanes tipped off," per Analis Bailey of USA Today.

"Announcers Stephanie White and Pam Ward also observed a moment of silence during Saturday's game in Connecticut," Bailey added. And Elle Duncan mentioned the walkouts on the air on Friday...
Shutdown begins at CP Rail as two sides continue to negotiate

CALGARY — The company and the union are pointing fingers of blame at each other for a shutdown of Canadian Pacific Railway operations that began Sunday while the two sides remained at the bargaining table.
THE BLAME IS ALL MANAGEMENT
AFTER ALL MANAGEMENT MAKES THE RULES
© Provided by The Canadian Press

The Teamsters Canada Rail Conference, which represents some 3,000 engineers, conductors, yard workers, and other train employees, issued a release just before midnight saying a lockout was being initiated by management at the Calgary-based railway.

But hours later the company put out a release stating that while the company was still engaged in contract talks facilitated by federal mediators, the TCRC "withdrew its services and issued a news release misrepresenting the status of the talks." It added that CP was working with its customers to wind down its operations across Canada.

The union then issued a subsequent release which said that in addition to the lockout, Teamsters Canada Rail Conference members were also on strike at CP throughout the country with picketing underway at various Canadian Pacific locations.

The office of federal Labour Minister Seamus O'Regan said in a statement that while the work stoppage had begun both parties were still at the bargaining table with mediators and it expected "the parties to keep working until they reach an agreement." The more than two dozen outstanding issues in the dispute include wages, benefits and pensions.

Last week, about 45 industry groups warned that any disruption of rail service would hinder Canada's freight capacity and hurt the broader economy as it grapples with inflation, product shortages, rising fuel costs and the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

CP Rail had issued a 72-hour notice to the TCRC of its plan to implement a lockout on Sunday if the union and the company failed to reach a negotiated settlement or agree to binding arbitration.

The union said in its release that it wanted to continue bargaining but "unfortunately, the employer chose to put the Canadian supply chain and tens of thousands of jobs at risk."

TCRC spokesman Dave Fulton called the turn of events "disappointing" saying the railway must be "taken to task" for this decision.

He said the union was willing to explore an arbitrator's decision but was unable to reach an agreement with the employer.

"They set the deadline for a lockout to happen tonight when we were willing to pursue negotiations," he said. "Even more so, they then moved the goalpost when it came time to discuss the terms of final and binding arbitration.”

CP, for its part, blamed the union for the shutdown.

"This is clearly a failure of the TCRC Negotiating Committee's responsibility to negotiate in good faith," it said in its statement.

This report by The Canadian Press was first published March 19, 2022.

Companies in this story: (TSX: CP)

The Canadian Press