
How does integration challenge us?
About this theme
This theme explores some of the economic and social challenges faced by members of cultural communities in Canada.
Speakers for the Dead
Speakers for the Dead
2000, director: Jennifer Holness, David Sutherland
Excerpt (2:25)
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> Racism | Black people | Ontario | Black Canadians
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Black people knew they had to stay off the streets in the evening in some Ontario towns. Historian Elise Harding Davis explains that this nineteenth and twentieth century requirement was known as the "sundown law." Helen Miller, a descendant of Priceville, Ontario residents, observes that racism was prevalent in Canada, but was more "undercover," as compared with the United States.
Racism in Canada, unlike in the U.S., was “under cover.” Give one example that might prove this statement.
In the 1930s in rural Ontario, farmer Bill Reid buried the tombstones of a
Black cemetery under a pile of broken rocks to make way for a potato patch. In
the 1980s, descendants of the original settlers, Black and White, came
together to restore the cemetery--but there were hidden truths no one wanted
to discuss. Deep racial wounds were opened. Scenes of the cemetery excavation,
interviews with residents and re-enactments--including one of a baseball game
where a broken headstone is used for home plate--add to the film's emotional
intensity.
Meet Helen and Alan Miller, seventh-generation Black Canadians and members of the cemetery restoration committee. And Les Mackinnon, a fiery, fourth-generation Scottish Canadian who heads the movement to restore the Priceville cemetery. Speakers of the Dead reveals the turmoil stirred up by desecrated graves and underlines the hidden history of Blacks in Canada.
Speakers of the Dead was produced as part of the Reel Diversity Competition for emerging filmmakers of colour. Reel Diversity is a National Film Board of Canada initiative in partnership with CBC Newsworld.
Meet Helen and Alan Miller, seventh-generation Black Canadians and members of the cemetery restoration committee. And Les Mackinnon, a fiery, fourth-generation Scottish Canadian who heads the movement to restore the Priceville cemetery. Speakers of the Dead reveals the turmoil stirred up by desecrated graves and underlines the hidden history of Blacks in Canada.
Speakers of the Dead was produced as part of the Reel Diversity Competition for emerging filmmakers of colour. Reel Diversity is a National Film Board of Canada initiative in partnership with CBC Newsworld.













