Black Lives Matter: What's different now? - Action News
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ManitobaUpdated

Black Lives Matter: What's different now?

CBC Up To Speed host Ismaila Alfa was joined by Joe Curtis, Nampande Londe and Imani Pinder for a multi-generational look at the fight against systemic racism.

CBC Asks event takes an intergenerational look at efforts to end racial violence, discrimination

CBC Up To Speed host Ismaila Alfa will lead the conversation in a special CBC Asks called Black Lives Matter: What's different now? (Donna Carreiro/CBC)

Joe Curtis spent decades living with racism the safest way that he felt was acceptable by smilingand looking the other way.

"It was encouraged in society that you have to 'Go along to get along,'"saidthe 52-year-old Winnipeg musician, who is Black.

"So if people exhibited racism and I didn't get angry, I was the good guy like, 'Hey, you can say that around Joe. He's a good guy.'"

The facade was "very, very hard," he said.

But the times, he hopes, are changing.

"It feels like we're on the precipice of significant change, the tipping point of the needle," he said.

Imani Pinder, 17, agrees. The Winnipeg high school student says she was shy "to the point where I let people walk all over me" until she finally spoke up against racism in her former school.

"Now, I speak out. I have a sense of empowerment for myself that I've never felt before."

Anti-Black racism and targeted violence against people of colour have gone on for centuries,and for centuries, there have been efforts to end the systemic racism, but to no avail leaving history to repeat itself time and time again.

But after George Floyd was murdered at the hands of policein May 2020, the world paid attention.

Largeprotests followed.

I looked to the younger women and teens who organized the rally and got inspired by them- Nampande Londe

In Manitoba, more than 15,000 people took part in a demonstration on the steps of the legislature on June 5. It was organized by Justice 4 Black Lives eight women and teens who are part of a new generation of justice seekers.

It gives Nampande Londe hope.

The Winnipeg artist, healer and community organizer has attended rallies in the past, but they left her so traumatized and demoralized, she dreaded attending the Justice 4Black Lives rally.

Today, she's encouraged.

"Even though I'm also young, I looked to the younger women and teens who organized the recent rally and got inspired by them," she said.

Winnipeg musician Joe Curtis, right, joined Up To Speed host Ismaila Alfa for the CBC Asks Black Lives Matter: What's different now? (Donna Carreiro/CBC)

Londe, Pinder and Curtis concur; there's change in the air, and a renewed sense of hope.

And CBC Manitoba wantedto find out why, on a special CBC Asks event on Wednesday, where we asked the questionBlack Lives Matter: What's different now?

CBC Up To Speed host Ismaila Alfa was joined by Curtis, Londe and Pinder for a multi-generational look at the fight against systemic racism.

WATCH | CBC Asks: Black Lives Matter What's different now?

CBC Asks: Black Lives Matter What's different now?

4 years ago
Duration 47:06
CBC Up To Speed host Ismaila Alfa leads the conversation in a special CBC Asks called Black Lives Matter: What's different now?