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Viola Desmond banknote set to go into circulation

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New $10 bill will also feature a map of Halifax's historic north end
The Canadian Press · Posted: Nov 11, 2018 7:34 PM AT | Last Updated: November 12

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Wanda Robson, sister of Viola Desmond, holds the new $10 banknote in Halifax on Thursday, March 8, 2018. The civil rights icon is the first Canadian woman to be featured on a regularly circulating bank note. (Darren Calabrese/Canadian Press)

A new $10 banknote featuring Viola Desmond's portrait will go into circulation in a week, just over 72 years after she was ousted from the whites-only section of a movie theatre in New Glasgow, N.S.

The civil rights pioneer and businesswoman is the first Canadian woman to be featured on a regularly circulating banknote.

The new bill will also feature a map of Halifax's historic north end, home to one of Canada's oldest black communities and the site where Desmond opened her first salon.

Irvine Carvery, a prominent Halifax north-ender and former school board chair, says he's excited that the bill will both pay tribute to her and the neighbourhood.

He says the bill points to a recognition of the struggle that African Canadians have faced throughout history.

The Bank of Canada says the bill will also be the first vertically oriented banknote in Canada, which would allow for a more prominent image of Desmond and differentiate it from the current polymer notes.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova...banknote-goes-into-circulation-soon-1.4901526
 
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Old news but it wasnt posted and is interesting....

Desmond refused to give up seat at N.S. movie theatre in 1946, years before Rosa Parks's act of defiance
Cassie Williams · CBC News · Posted: Mar 08, 2018 1:47 PM AT | Last Updated: March 8

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Wanda Robson, the sister of Viola Desmond, smiles as the new $10 featuring her sister Viola Desmond is unveiled. (Canadian Press)

A woman who stood up for the rights of black people in Nova Scotia and went to jail for it was honoured Thursday, as the new $10 bill featuring her image was unveiled.

The event celebrating Viola Desmond was set to begin around 12:30 p.m. AT at the Halifax Central Library, but a power outage delayed it.

Her sister, Wanda Robson, was among those who attended a 2016 ceremony where it was announced Desmond had been chosen from a short list of other noted Canadian women to be featured on the currency.

"I say thank you, thank you, thank you," said Robson. "Our family will go down in history — in history, imagine that."

On Thursday, Robson helped unveil the design of Canada's new $10 bill.

"Is this mine?" she asked Finance Minister Bill Morneau. When he offered to hold it for her, she joked, "You're not getting it."

After the unveiling, Morneau took the podium.

"I want to start by saying that you need to know that this note is not yet in circulation until the end of the year, but Wanda is keeping hers," Morneau said, smiling. "It tells you about the balance of power in this country."

On Nov. 8, 1946, Desmond went to see a movie at the Roseland Theatre in New Glasgow while her car was getting fixed.

Desmond, 32, was dragged out of the theatre by police and jailed for defiantly sitting in the "whites only" section of a film house. Black people could only sit in the balcony of the theatre.


The civil rights activist was convicted of defrauding the province of a one-penny tax, the difference in tax between a downstairs and upstairs ticket, even though Desmond had asked to pay the difference.

She was released after paying a $20 fine and $6 in court costs. She appealed her conviction but lost.

Desmond is often described as Canada's Rosa Parks, even though Desmond's act of defiance happened nine years before Parks refused to give up her seat on an Alabama bus.

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A portrait of Viola Desmond, circa 1940. The new Canadian $10 bill bears her image. (Communications Nova Scotia/Bank of Canada/Flickr)

Desmond is the first black person — and the first non-royal woman — to appear on a regularly circulating Canadian bank note. (Agnes MacPhail, Canada's first female member of Parliament, is one of four people featured on a commemorative $10 bill created for Canada 150.)

"It's a long-awaited sense of belonging for the African-Canadian community," said Russell Grosse, executive director of the Black Cultural Centre for Nova Scotia.

"The launch of the bill sends people of African descent the message that Canada is finally accepting us. We belong."

According to the Bank of Canada, Desmond's court case was the first known legal challenge against racial segregation brought forward by a black woman in Canada.


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It took 63 years for Nova Scotia to issue a posthumous apology and pardon to Desmond, who died in 1965.(Wanda Robson)

Segregation was legally ended in Nova Scotia in 1954, in part because of the publicity generated by Desmond's case.

"Viola Desmond carried out a singular act of courage," said Isaac Saney, a senior instructor of black studies at Dalhousie University. "There was no movement behind her. She was ahead of the times."

It would be 63 years after her conviction before Nova Scotia issued Desmond, who died in 1965, a posthumous apology and pardon.

Despite this, Desmond's story received little attention until recent years.

Her legacy is being increasingly recognized. Her name now graces a Halifax Transit harbour ferry, a Canada Post stamp, and there are plans for streets named in her honour in Montreal and Halifax and a park in Toronto.

https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/nova-scotia/viola-desmond-10-unveiled-1.4567765
 
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I admire the way Canadians respect all of their historic figures equally. Unlike our appeasement government who only kisses Gandhi's feet.
 
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