Archive for the ‘General’ Category

Join a Discussion on Multiculturalism with Martin Luther King, III

Wednesday, October 12th, 2011

On October 16, a memorial to Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. will be dedicated on the National Mall in Washington, DC.  

Martin Luther King Memorial Jr. in Washington DC

Martin Luther King Jr. Memorial in Washington DC

To celebrate this special event, join us on Monday, October 17 at 10:00 EDT (14:00 UTC) for a discussion on multiculturalism with Mr. Martin Luther King, III, the oldest son of Dr. MLK, Jr. and the President and CEO of the Martin Luther King Jr. Center for Nonviolent Social Change. 

Format: This will be a video webchat in English. Click  here and “Enter as a Guest” to participate. 

Celebrating National Hispanic Heritage Month

Wednesday, September 14th, 2011

Hispanic Heritage Month, September 15-October 15, honors the diverse people of Spanish-speaking backgrounds in the United States — those who trace their roots to Spain, Mexico and the Spanish-speaking nations of Central America, South America and the Caribbean.

Special programs, events, exhibits and websites celebrate the culture, traditions and extraordinary contributions of the 50 million Hispanics who constitute the largest and fastest-growing minority group in the United States, according to the Census Bureau. In addition, there are about 4 million residents of Puerto Rico, a Caribbean U.S. territory.

The Hispanic population is projected to nearly triple to almost 133 million by 2050, and will jump from 16 percent to 30 percent of the U.S. population. Two-thirds of Hispanic-origin people in the United States are of Mexican background. Next in line are people of Puerto Rican, Cuban, Salvadoran and Dominican backgrounds.

THE STORY OF AMERICA ITSELF

Today, more than ever, Hispanic Americans play an integral role in shaping the American experience. Hispanics serve on the U.S. Supreme Court and in two Cabinet posts (Labor and Interior). The influence of Hispanic culture is reflected in every aspect of American life, from politics to education, music and television.

“The story of Hispanics in America is the story of America itself,” says President Obama. “The Hispanic community’s values — love of family, a deep and abiding faith, and a strong work ethic — are America’s values.”

The president says that Hispanics have served with honor and distinction in the armed services and have enriched U.S. culture in every arena, “from sports to the sciences and from the arts to our economy.”

The Census Bureau, for example, reports that there are more than 2.3 million Hispanic-owned businesses in the United States. That number jumped 43.6 percent between 2002 and 2007. In the United States, Hispanic buying power is growing faster than that of non-Hispanics.

National Hispanic Heritage Month

HONORING HISPANIC CULTURE

The celebration of Hispanic heritage began on a national scale in 1968 with a weeklong celebration. The designated week was selected to coincide with Independence Day celebrations on September 15 in Costa Rica, El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua, September 16 in Mexico and September 18 in Chile. In 1988, President Reagan approved a law expanding the celebration to a month, running from September 15 to October 15.

In addition to officials leading events and participating in conferences, the White House will feature Hispanics from throughout the Administration who are contributing to the President’s vision for winning the future in a daily blogpost on “Renewing the American Dream”.

Also,  a number of U.S. government agencies celebrate the month with special events and projects.

The U.S. Library of Congress has a Web page dedicated to Hispanic Heritage Month. The library is also sponsoring the creation of an oral history of America, and one initiative — StoryCorps Historias — focuses specifically on recording the diverse stories and life experiences of Latinos in the United States. Its Veterans History Project site features pages devoted to Hispanics in Service and Experiencing War.

The Smithsonian Institution, headquartered in Washington, has created the Smithsonian Latino Center to develop Latino-themed programs and exhibits for national and international audiences.  Consult the Smithsonian’s complete schedule  of Hispanic Heritage Month programming.

Another agency celebrating Hispanic Heritage Month is the National Park Service, which tells the story of Freedom Tower, the entry point for thousands of exiled Cubans into Miami, now a national historic landmark.

Also explore Hispanics in U.S. Culture

Upcoming Event on September 15 2011 — Elizabeth Killam Rodgers and Constance Killam Distinguished Lecture by celebrated Canadian economist Thomas J. Courchene

Friday, August 26th, 2011

The 9th annual Elizabeth Killam Rodgers and Constance Killam distinguished public lecture, entitled “Rekindling the American Dream”,  will be presented on Thursday September 15, 2011 at 5:30pm by celebrated Canadian economist Thomas J. Courchene and is scheduled to take place in the Cadieux Auditorium at the Lester B. Pearson Building (Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade Canada) at 125 Sussex Drive in Ottawa.

 Tom Courchene is the Jarislowsky-Deutsch Professor of Economics and Financial Policy at Queen’s University and a member of the School of Policy Studies, the Department of Economics, and the Faculty of Law.  He is also Senior Scholar, Institute for Research on Public Policy.  His research interests include financial deregulation, the political economy of Canadian federalism and comparative federal systems, climate change, and the knowledge-based economy.  

Canadian economist Thomas J. Courchene will deliver the  Elizabeth Killam Rodgers and Constance Killam distinguished public lecture, entitled "Rekindling the American Dream".

Canadian economist Thomas J. Courchene will deliver the Elizabeth Killam Rodgers and Constance Killam distinguished public lecture, entitled "Rekindling the American Dream".

Professor Courchene is the author or editor of some 60 books and over 250 academic articles on a wide range of Canadian public policy issues, including Social Policy in the 1990s: Agenda for Reform, Equalization Payments: Past, Present and Future, and A State of Minds: Toward a Human Capital Future for Canadians.  A collection of his recent articles appears as Rearrangements.  His book, Social Canada in the Millennium, was awarded the Doug Purvis Prize for the best Canadian economic policy contribution (1994) and his book, with Colin Telmer, From Heartland to North American Region State: The Social, Fiscal and Federal Evolution of Ontario (1998), won the inaugural Donner Prize for the best book on Canadian public policy.  He is a recipient of the Molson Prize for lifetime achievement in the Social Sciences and Humanities (1999) and an Officer of the Order of Canada.  The lecture is coincident with Fulbright Canada’s annual orientation for Killam undergraduate exchange students, Fulbright American student grantees in Canada, and American Fulbright scholars in Canada.

Interview with Hijabi Monologues’ Sahar Ullah

Monday, March 14th, 2011

 

Hijabi Monologues creative director Sahar Ullah performing at the Kennedy Center. Courtesy of Ayesha Ahmad Photography.

Our friend Sahar Ullah, creator of the Hijabi Monologues, recently did an interview on Latitudes, a radio program out of American University’s WAMU 88.5.  The interview features Sahar and includes performance excerpts from Kamilah Pickett and Maytha Alhassen, who were both in Ottawa performing the Monologues last fall.

Click HERE to listen to the interview!

Black History Month 2011

Monday, February 7th, 2011

In 1861, as the United States stood at the brink of Civil War, people of African descent, both enslaved and free persons, waited with a watchful eye. They understood that a war between the North and the South might bring about jubilee–the destruction of slavery and universal freedom. When the Confederacy fired upon Fort Sumter and war ensued, President Abraham Lincoln maintained that the paramount cause was to preserve the Union, not end slavery. Frederick Douglass, the most prominent black leader, opined that regardless of intentions, the war would bring an end to slavery, America’s “peculiar institution.”

Over the course of the war, the four million people of African descent in the United States proved Douglass right. Free and enslaved blacks rallied around the Union flag in the cause of freedom. From the cotton and tobacco fields of the South to the small towns and big cities of the North, nearly 200,000 joined the Grand Army of the Republic and took up arms to destroy the Confederacy.

They served as recruiters, soldiers, nurses, and spies, and endured unequal treatment, massacres, and riots as they pursued their quest for freedom and equality. Their record of service speaks for itself, and Americans have never fully realized how their efforts saved the Union.

In honor of the efforts of people of African descent to destroy slavery and inaugurate universal freedom in the United States, the Association for the Study of African American Life and History has selected “African Americans and the Civil War” as the 2011 National Black History Theme. We urge all Americans to study and reflect on the value of their contributions to the nation.

Source: Association for the Study of African American Life and History


Black Soldiers in the Civil War

African American troops contributed greatly to the Union war effort

By Joyce Hansen
A four-time winner of the Coretta Scott King Honor Book Award, Joyce Hansen has published short stories and 15 books of contemporary and historical fiction and nonfiction for young readers, including Between Two Fires: Black Soldiers in the Civil War.

When the American Civil War began in 1861, Jacob Dodson, a free black man living in Washington, D.C., wrote to Secretary of War Simon Cameron informing him that he knew of “300 reliable colored free citizens” who wanted to enlist and defend the city. Cameron replied that “this department has no intention at present to call into the service of the government any colored soldiers.” It didn’t matter that black men, slave and free, had served in colonial militias and had fought on both sides of the Revolutionary War. Many black men felt that serving in the military was a way they might gain freedom and full citizenship.

Why did many military and civilian leaders reject the idea of recruiting black soldiers? Some said that black troops would prove too cowardly to fight white men, others said that they would be inferior fighters, and some thought that white soldiers would not serve with black soldiers. There were a few military leaders, though, who had different ideas.

On March 31, 1862, almost a year after the first shots of the Civil War were fired at Fort Sumter, South Carolina, Union (northern) troops commanded by General David Hunter took control of the islands off the coasts of northern Florida, Georgia, and South Carolina. Local whites who owned the rich cotton and rice plantations fled to the Confederate-controlled (southern) mainland. Most of their slaves remained on the islands, and they soon were joined by black escapees from the mainland who believed they would be liberated if only they could reach the Union lines. It would not be that simple.

Even as Hunter needed more soldiers to control the region’s many tidal rivers and islands against stubborn Confederate guerrilla resistance, he observed how escaping mainland slaves were swelling the islands’ black population. Perhaps, he reasoned, the African Americans could solve his manpower shortage. He devised a radical plan.

Hunter, a staunch abolitionist, took it upon himself to free the slaves — not just on the islands but through­out Confederate-controlled South Carolina, Georgia, and Florida — and to recruit black men capable of bearing arms as Union soldiers. He would attempt to train and form the first all-black regiment of the Civil War.

With the Emancipation Proclamation, the Union began to recruit African-American soldiers.

With the Emancipation Proclamation, the Union began to recruit African-American soldiers

News traveled slowly in those days, and President Abraham Lincoln did not hear about Hunter’s regiment until June. While Lincoln opposed slavery, he feared moving more quickly than public opinion in the embattled North — and particularly in the slaveholding border states that had sided with the Union — would allow. He also was adamant that “no commanding general shall do such a thing, upon my responsibility, without consulting me.” In an angry letter, the president informed the general that neither he nor any other subordinate had the right to free anyone, although he carefully asserted for himself the right to emancipate slaves at a time of his choosing. Hunter was ordered to disband the regiment, but the seed he planted soon sprouted.

In August 1862, two weeks after Hunter had dismantled his regiment, the War Department allowed General Rufus Saxton to raise the Union Army’s first official black regiment, the First South Carolina Volunteers. This and other black regiments organized in the coastal regions successfully defended and held the coastal islands for the duration of the war.

The First Kansas Colored Volunteers was also organized around this time, but without official War Department sanction. Meanwhile, President Lincoln had carefully laid the groundwork for emancipation and the inclusion of men of African descent into the military. As white northerners increasingly understood that black slaves were crucial to the Confederacy’s economy and to its war effort, Lincoln could justify freeing the slaves as matter of military necessity.

When Abraham Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation on January 1, 1863, the military’s policy toward enslaved people became clearer. Those who reached the Union lines would be free. Also, the War Department began to recruit and enlist black troops for newly formed regiments of the Union Army — the United States Colored Troops (USCT). All of the officers in these regiments, however, would be white.

By the fall of 1864, some 140 black regiments had been raised in many northern states and in southern territories captured by the Union. About 180,000 African Americans served during the Civil War, including more than 75,000 northern black volunteers.

Although the black regiments were segregated from their white counterparts, they fought the same battles. Black troops performed bravely and successfully even though they coped with both the Confederate enemy and the suspicion of some of their Union military colleagues.

Once black men were accepted into the military, they were limited in many cases to garrison and fatigue duty. The famed Massachusetts 54th Regiment’s Colonel Robert Gould Shaw actively petitioned superiors to give his men a chance to engage in battle and prove themselves as soldiers. Some of the other officers who knew what their men could do did the same. Black troops had to fight to get the same pay as white soldiers. Some regiments refused to accept lower pay. It was not until 1865, the year the war ended, that Congress passed a law providing equal pay for black soldiers.

Despite these restrictions, the United States Colored Troops successfully participated in 449 military engagements, 39 of them major battles. They fought in battles in South Carolina, Louisiana, Florida, Virginia, Tennessee, Alabama, and other states. They bravely stormed forts and faced artillery knowing that if captured by the enemy, they would not be given the rights of prisoners of war, but instead would be sold into slavery. The black troops performed with honor and valor all of the duties of soldiers.

Despite the Army’s policy of only having white officers, eventually about 100 black soldiers rose from the ranks and were commissioned as officers. Eight black surgeons also received commissions in the USCT. More than a dozen USCT soldiers were given the Congressional Medal of Honor for bravery.

In 1948, President Harry S. Truman ordered the desegregation of the armed forces. Today’s military remains an engine of social and economic opportunity for black Americans. But it was the sacrifices of the Civil War-era black soldiers that paved the way for the full acceptance of African Americans in the United States military. More fundamentally, their efforts were an important part of the struggle of African Americans for liberty and dignity.

This article is excerpted from the book Free At Last: The U.S. Civil Rights Movement, published by the Bureau of International Information Programs.

 

The African American Civil War Memorial Museum

The African American Civil War Memorial Museum opened to the public in January 1999. Using photographs, documents and state of the art audio visual equipment, the museum helps visitors understand the African American’s heroic and largely unknown struggle for freedom.

African American War Memorial

Slavery to Freedom: Civil War to Civil Rights

The Museum’s permanent exhibition portrays the extraordinatry African American struggle for freedom in the United States.

Descendants Registry

Tracing their lineage from USCT, more than 2,000 descendants have already supplied family trees, letters and other documents to the African American Civil War Memorial Freedom Foundation Registry. Visitors receive help in their search for relatives who may have served with USCT. Family members with soldiers who served with United States Colored Troops register in the Descendants Registry.

Computer Search for Your Soldier

Computer Search for your soldier via computers to the Internet and the National Park Service Civil War Soldiers and Sailors web site. The CWSS Names Index identifies black troops, along with their regiments, regimental histories, and information on 384 major Civil War battles.

The Gladstone Collection

Unrivalled, unique, worth more than $2,000,000 and priceless for those who want to understand the significance of USCT in the Fight for Freedom in the United States, this is one of the largest collections assembled about black participation in the Civil War. William Gladstone spent more than 20 years locating the well cataloged pieces that have been the subject of several books and major exhibits.

Source: The African American Civil War Memorial Museum, http://www.afroamcivilwar.org/

Black History Month Honors Legacy of Struggle and Triumph

By Louise Fenner

Washington — Each February, Black History Month honors the struggles and triumphs of millions of American citizens over the most devastating obstacles — slavery, prejudice, poverty — as well as their contributions to the nation’s cultural and political life.

According to the U.S. Census Bureau, African Americans make up about 14 percent of the U.S. population and comprise the second-largest minority group, after Hispanics.

In 2009, the inauguration of Barack Obama, America’s first African-American president, lent Black History Month a special significance. Obama took the oath of office January 20, the day after Americans honored the memory of Martin Luther King Jr. with a federal holiday and national day of service.

In his inaugural address, Obama acknowledged the historical importance of a moment in which “a man whose father less than 60 years ago might not have been served at a local restaurant can now stand before you to take a most sacred oath.”

HONORING ACCOMPLISHMENTS OF BLACK AMERICANS
Black History Month was the inspiration of Carter G. Woodson, a noted scholar and historian, who instituted Negro History Week in 1926. He chose the second week of February to coincide with the birthdays of President Abraham Lincoln and the abolitionist Frederick Douglass. The celebration was expanded to a month in 1976, the nation’s bicentennial. President Gerald R. Ford urged Americans to “seize the opportunity to honor the too-often neglected accomplishments of black Americans in every area of endeavor throughout our history.”

Woodson, the son of former slaves in Virginia, realized that the struggles and achievements of Americans of African descent were being ignored or misrepresented. He founded the Association for the Study of
African American Life and History (ASALH), which supports historical research, publishes a scholarly journal and sets the theme for Black History Month each year.

John Fleming, ASALH president from 2007 to 2009 and director emeritus of the Cincinnati Museum Center, said Obama’s heritage — a black father born in Kenya and a white mother born in the United States — “continues to reflect the contributions Africans and Europeans have made to American history from the very beginning.”

Fleming said he believes Black History Month should focus on positive as well as negative aspects of the black experience. “Certainly, struggle has been an ongoing theme in our history from the very beginning. However, we were not slaves prior to being captured in Africa — and while slavery was part of our experience for 250 years, we have a hundred-and-some years in freedom that we also need to deal with.”

He said he has seen “substantial progress on many fronts,” but “at the same time there are still major problems that have to be addressed, one being the permanent underclass in urban areas now. We don’t seem to be able to break that cycle of poverty. And there are still some major rural pockets of poverty” such as in the Mississippi Delta.

“I’m glad to see the National African American Museum being developed on the Mall, which will tell a much broader story,” said Fleming. In 2003, President George W. Bush signed legislation to establish the new museum, which will be located on the National Mall near the Washington Monument. Although the new museum has not yet been built, it launched a photo exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery late in 2007 that is traveling to museums around the country through 2011.

“I think that African-American history gets more attention during February than during any other time of year, “ Fleming said, “and I think it’s an opportunity for us in the field to emphasize that it is something that should be studied throughout the year.”

Each year, the U.S. president honors Black History Month, or African-American History Month as it is also called, with a proclamation and a celebration at the White House. States and cities hold their own events around the country, and media feature topics related to black history.

ASALH has its headquarters in Washington, where Woodson lived from 1915 until his death in 1950. His home is designated a national historic site.

(This is a product of the Bureau of International Information Programs, U.S. Department of State. Web site: http://www.america.gov)


Presidential Proclamation
National African American History Month

The great abolitionist and orator Frederick Douglass once told us, “If there is no struggle, there is no progress.” Progress in America has not come easily, but has resulted from the collective efforts of generations. For centuries, African American men and women have persevered to enrich our national life and bend the arc of history toward justice. From resolute Revolutionary War soldiers fighting for liberty to the hardworking students of today reaching for horizons their ancestors could only have imagined, African Americans have strengthened our Nation by leading reforms, overcoming obstacles, and breaking down barriers. During National African American History Month, we celebrate the vast contributions of African Americans to our Nation’s history and identity.

This year’s theme, “African Americans and the Civil War,” invites us to reflect on 150 years since the start of the Civil War and on the patriots of a young country who fought for the promises of justice and equality laid out by our forbearers. In the Emancipation Proclamation, President Abraham Lincoln not only extended freedom to those still enslaved within rebellious areas, he also opened the door for African Americans to join the Union effort.

Tens of thousands of African Americans enlisted in the United States Army and Navy, making extraordinary sacrifices to help unite a fractured country and free millions from slavery. These gallant soldiers, like those in the 54th Massachusetts Infantry Regiment, served with distinction, braving both intolerance and the perils of war to inspire a Nation and expand the domain of freedom. Beyond the battlefield, black men and women also supported the war effort by serving as surgeons, nurses, chaplains, spies, and in other essential roles. These brave Americans gave their energy, their spirit, and sometimes their lives for the noble cause of liberty.

Over the course of the next century, the United States struggled to deliver fundamental civil and human rights to African Americans, but African Americans would not let their dreams be denied. Though Jim Crow segregation slowed the onward march of history and expansion of the American dream, African Americans braved bigotry and violence to organize schools, churches, and neighborhood organizations. Bolstered by strong values of faith and community, black men and women have launched businesses, fueled scientific advances, served our Nation in the Armed Forces, sought public office, taught our children, and created groundbreaking works of art and entertainment. To perfect our Union and provide a better life for their children, tenacious civil rights pioneers have long demanded that America live up to its founding principles, and their efforts continue to inspire us.

Though we inherit the extraordinary progress won by the tears and toil of our predecessors, we know barriers still remain on the road to equal opportunity. Knowledge is our strongest tool against injustice, and it is our responsibility to empower every child in America with a world-class education from cradle to career. We must continue to build on our Nation’s foundation of freedom and ensure equal opportunity, economic security, and civil rights for all Americans. After a historic recession has devastated many American families, and particularly African Americans, we must continue to create jobs, support our middle class, and strengthen pathways for families to climb out of poverty.

During National African American History Month, we recognize the extraordinary achievements of African Americans and their essential role in shaping the story of America. In honor of their courage and contributions, let us resolve to carry forward together the promise of America for our children.

NOW, THEREFORE, I, BARACK OBAMA, President of the United States of America, by virtue of the authority vested in me by the Constitution and the laws of the United States, do hereby proclaim February 2011 as National African American History Month. I call upon public officials, educators, librarians, and all the people of the United States to observe this month with appropriate programs, ceremonies, and activities.

IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have hereunto set my hand this first day of February, in the year of our Lord two thousand eleven, and of the Independence of the United States of America the two hundred and thirty-fifth.

BARACK OBAMA

The first official authorization to employ African Americans in federal service was the Second Confiscation and Militia Act of July 17, 1862.

Interesting facts about Black Soldiers in the Civil War

**By the end of the Civil War, roughly 179,000 black men (10% of the Union Army) served as soldiers in the U.S. Army and another 19,000 served in the Navy.

**”Nearly 40,000 black soldiers died over the course of the war—30,000 of infection or disease”

**On July 17, 1862, Congress passed the Second Confiscation and Militia Act, freeing slaves who had masters in the Confederate Army.

**Black women, who could not formally join the Army, nonetheless served as nurses, spies, and scouts, the most famous being Harriet Tubman , who scouted for the 2d South Carolina Volunteers.

**Black soldiers were initially paid $10 per month from which $3 was automatically deducted for clothing, resulting in a net pay of $7. In contrast, white soldiers received $13 per month from which no clothing allowance was drawn.

**In June 1864 Congress granted equal pay to the U.S. Colored Troops and made the action retroactive. Black soldiers received the same rations and supplies. In addition, they received comparable medical care.

**Black soldiers served in artillery and infantry and performed all non-combat support functions that sustain an army, as well. Black carpenters, chaplains, cooks, guards, laborers, nurses, scouts, spies, steamboat pilots, surgeons, and teamsters also contributed to the war cause.

**Because of prejudice against them, black units were not used in combat as extensively as they might have been. Nevertheless, the soldiers served with distinction in a number of battles. Black infantrymen fought gallantly at Milliken’s Bend, LA; Port Hudson, LA; Petersburg, VA; Nashville, TN” (and the assault on Fort Wagner, SC by the 54th Massachusetts.)

**By war’s end, 16 black soldiers had been awarded the Medal of Honor for their valor.

Source: The National Archives and Records Administration.

This Education & the Arts Post was produced by the Information Resource Center
Embassy of the United States

…And the 2010 Grant Recipients Are…

Wednesday, October 20th, 2010

May and September 2010 Grant Award Recipients of the U.S. Mission in Canada American Studies-Community Partnership
Grant Competitions

Ontario HIV Treatment Network: North American Housing and HIV/AIDS Research Summit, Toronto, Ontario (May Award)

Project Overview: The Ontario HIV Treatment Network’s award funded the participation of U.S. experts in the North American Housing and HIV/AIDS Research Summit held June 2-4, 2010 in Toronto. More than 250 community members, academic researchers and policy makers from Canada and the United States shared new research, brainstormed new ideas, and formed new partnerships as they focused on the connection between housing and health concerns for people with HIV/AIDS.

Rolling Darkness Review, Ottawa, Ontario (May Award)

Project Overview: The award to the “Rolling Darkness Review” (RDR), a multi-media experience incorporating live music and ghost story readings, will provide a remarkable Canadian-American exchange, exposing Canadian audiences to some of America’s finer horror writing talents, providing a forum for questions and answers and academic exchanges, and granting spectators an opportunity to discover new American authors, ideas and books. Following the Writers Festival, the program will also venture to northern Ontario for additional performances.

Cross Border Pollination Series (Simon Fraser University), Vancouver (May Award)

Project Overview: The “Cross-Border Pollination” project is a community and cross-cultural exchange program between Canadian and American writers and readers. Not only will the authors collaborate with one another in a dynamic evening of shared readings, they will also offer up a literary feast to audiences in bookstores and libraries in Vancouver to people whose only common interest is love of the written word.

Calgary International Film Festival, Calgary, Alberta (September Award)

Project Overview: The Calgary International Film Festival‘s objective is sharing with Canadians the new cinematic talent emerging from the U.S. as well as creating greater mutual understanding between the two nations. This year’s festival will screen fifteen feature films created by American independent artists in attendance for the screening, participating in a question and answer period afterwards. The American filmmakers will also have an opportunity to connect with others in the Canadian film industry.

Alberta Institute of American Studies at the University of Alberta, Edmonton, Alberta (September Award)

Project Overview: The Alberta Institute for American Studies Speakers’ Series brings knowledgeable individuals from the United States to give public lectures at the University of Alberta. The Institute will expand its Speakers’ Series and introduce a new Video-Seminar Series at the University. The new video-seminar series will link University of Alberta departments with institutions in the United States. These seminars will address significant topics in American Studies.

Centre for Trade Policy and Law at Carleton University, Ottawa, Ontario (September Award)

Project Overview: The Centre has planned a one-day workshop that will bring together key policymakers from relevant government departments in Canada, policy experts and government official from the United States and Canada, representatives of international donor agencies working in the Caribbean, private sector and civil society representatives, and others who can bring practical experience to the discussion of Canadian-United States economic development cooperation in the Caribbean and make policy recommendations. The workshop will highlight a case study completed by graduate students and their faculty advisors entitled “U.S. – Canada Cooperation on Mainstreaming SME Finance in the Caribbean,” also a component of the project.

McGill Institute for the Study of Canada at McGill University, Montreal, Quebec (September Award)

Project Overview: The McGill Institute for the Study of Canada will host a two-and-a-half day conference on the Canada-U.S. relationship. The conference will bring together historians, former and current politicians, policy-makers, journalists, interested stakeholders and academics to address a broad range of issues affecting the two countries, such as, history, policy-making, the current state of the Canada-U.S. relationship, security and trade issues, and the fundamental differences in how the media portrays issues (health care, climate change, security, etc) in Canada and the U.S.

Carrousel International Film Festival for Children and Youth, Rimouski, Quebec (September Award)

Project Overview: The organizers of the 28th Carrousel International Film Festival for Children and Youth in Rimouski, Quebec have aimed at their project at expanding the American studies participation in community projects and activities that provide participants with new/expanded educational and cultural opportunities in Canada. The award will assist in bringing American film directors to the Festival who will share their expertise and their film in public screening and lecture as well as in classroom settings.

American Society for Ethnohistory at the University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ontario (September Award)

Project Overview: The American Society for Ethnohistory is holding its 2010 Annual Meeting in Ottawa in October. Hundreds of scholars from across the Americas will focus on indigenous societies and their relations with expanding colonial and modern state structure of Canada, America and Latin America. The conference will address the relationship between Native societies and expanding state structure in the Americas. The meeting will be a forum to encourage discussions and reflection on alternative models of indigenous nation building, displacement and violence in the interior, and the vast process of native inclusion and exclusion in the construction of modern states.

Vancouver International Dance Festival, Vancouver, British Columbia (September Award)

Project Overview: The Vancouver International Dance Company’s project is a partnership between Canadian and American dance organizations as well as one that highlights the dance performance of the Khambatta Dance Company from Seattle, Washington. The project engages American Studies cultural practitioners in genuine collaborations with community organizers and the constituents they serve.

Winnipeg Cinematheque Theatre, Winnipeg, Manitoba (September Award)

Project Overview: Winnipeg Cinematheque Theatre is sponsoring a four-day documentary forum “Gimme Some Truth” that is a combination seminar, screening program, and craft workshop series that will provide the local film-making community and audiences the opportunity to learn about the documentary film practice and creative, technical, distribution, and ethical issues related to the practice and production of these works. The forum includes master classes and technical workshops in a program aimed at a post secondary audience.

An Autumn Array: Webchats, a Writers Festival, and Hispanic Heritage Month

Friday, October 1st, 2010

Join America.gov’s series of programs on climate change. All start at 8:00 a.m. EDT (1200 GMT) the day of the program (8:00 a.m. EST, 1300 GM).  Read more!

Next one coming up:
“Can We Slow Down Climate Change?”
Date: Wednesday, October 13
Speaker: Rick Duke, deputy assistant secretary for climate policy, U.S. Department of Energy

 Hey Booklovers!  Will you be in Canada’s National Capital Region this month? Check out the 2010 Ottawa International Writers Festival!  The main events are happening October 20-26, but a few “preface-tival” events are scheduled over the next few weeks.  (Get it? Preface – like in a book… and pre-festival…?) (As mentioned in the previous entry… it’s been a long September.)

Anyway, Saturday, October 23rd at 8:30pm is the Rolling Darkness Review Premiere at the Mayfare Theatre with American Horror novelists Glen Hirshberg and Peter Atkins.  It’s a sure bet to put you into full-on Halloween mode.

The full Writers Festival schedule is available here.

Last but not least, September 15 – October 15 is Hispanic Heritage Month!  Each year, Americans observe National Hispanic Heritage Month by celebrating the cultures and contributions of American citizens who came from — or whose ancestors came from — Spain, Mexico, the Caribbean and Central and South America.  Brush up on your Spanish and visit these resource links:

White House Proclamation: National Hispanic Heritage Month
“We honor Hispanics for enriching the fabric of America, even as we recognize and rededicate ourselves to addressing the challenges to equality and opportunity that many Hispanics still face,” says the National Hispanic Heritage Month 2010 presidential proclamation.

President Obama also proclaimed National Hispanic-Serving Institutions Week. Each year, the president welcomes distinguished Hispanic leaders, educators and artists to the White House.

The Library of Congress offers a Web portal on National Hispanic Heritage Month. It also sponsors StoryCorps Historias, which collects oral histories from Latinos in the United States.

The Smithsonian Institution celebrates Hispanic Heritage Month and also has the Smithsonian Latino Center, which focuses on Latino heritage and culture in the United States.

BY THE WAY, just because we’re in Canada doesn’t mean we only look for English and French speaking candidates for programs and exchanges.  We would love to send more SPANISH-SPEAKING Canadians on Western Hemisphere programs!  If you’re fluent Spanish-speaking mover & shaker (any age)… CONTACT US!

Things have been quiet on here…

Wednesday, September 29th, 2010

…But only because we’ve been out and about! …or “oot & aboot” as our locally engaged staff would say…  What were we doing?  WELL, we were:

  • - Welcoming the incoming Fulbrighters and celebrating Fulbright Canada’s 20th Anniversary.  Thursday night’s gala, as you may have read in the Ambassador’s Blog, was an incredible event!  
  • - Engaging with Alumni at events.
  • - Attending Eid dinners hosted by contacts.
  • - Programming this week’s IIP speaker program.
  • - AND attending the annual Public Affairs Conference.

There were of course other things, but it the past few weeks have been such a whirlwind that this is all we can remember.

Not to fret – new posts are on the way!!  In fact, we’ve been out with May and Kamilah of The Hijabi Monologues this week, so info on that is coming right up!  Stay tuned….

September 15th is Democracy Day

Wednesday, September 15th, 2010

“In democracies, respecting rights isn’t a choice leaders make day-by-day, it is the reason they govern.” — Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton

The International Day of Democracy is meant both to celebrate democracy and to serve as a reminder that the need to promote and protect democracy is as urgent now as ever. 

The choice of 15 September for the International Day of Democracy corresponds to the adoption in September 1997 by the IPU of a Universal Declaration on Democracy. That Declaration affirms the principles of democracy, the elements and exercise of democratic government, and the global scope of democracy.

Celebrate Democracy Day 2010 with some reading:

MY SUMMIT: a G(r)8 Success!!

Wednesday, August 18th, 2010

If you’ve visited this blog before you’ll know that this past June’s G8 and G20 summits weren’t the only official international meetings going on in Ontario; and that President Obama, Prime Minister Harper and the other world leaders weren’t the only decision makers hard at work . You wouldn’t have seen these other diplomats on television, nor would you have read about them in your morning paper… but delegations of promising youths from the G8 and G20 nations were busy observing, discussing, and negotiating the same international issues of concern at MY SUMMIT 2010 as their heads of state at the “real” Summits.  

 
 
            

MY SUMMIT, co-hosted by the Canadian government and not-for-profit organization Global Vision, was a once in a lifetime learning experience for seven outstanding American university students. It was an intensive five-day program that included cultural events, speaker panels, and challenging work group sessions.  

Ambassador Jacobson, Public Affairs staff, and U.S. Mission staff in Canada would like to thank the Canadian government and Global Vision for extending an invitation to the United States. We are all grateful for the unique opportunity that will hopefully springboard these seven potential future leaders into fulfilling careers. The students left the Summit inspired, and they made us proud.   

By all accounts Danielle Geneux, Lesley Dudden, Jordan Sanderson, Thao Ahn Tran, Garrett Harkins, Patrick Joseph Short and Melissa Greenaway were exceptional ambassadors for the U.S.; their enthusiasm, idealism, and modest confidence put forward a charismatic and diverse portrayal of young America for the delegations from other nations.   

Scroll down to see the students’ remarks and photos.   

The U.S. Delegation meets with Ambassador Jacobson.

Ambassador Jacobson sat down with the U.S. delegation on the final day of the Summit. Despite the whirlwind nature of the G8 and G20, the Ambassador left energized after talking to the group of professional young Americans. Just like the official Summits, the student delegations came together to discuss a variety of issues and put together a summary of their points of agreement. Many of the students told the Ambassador that it was small changes – like the wording of the communiqué – that mattered in the end, and that the informal relationships they developed with the other delegations outside of the workrooms helped them work out issues back at the table. Ambassador Jacobson agreed, sharing from his own experience how the personal relationships that develop through hallway conversation are often where the real diplomacy happens. “When you’re dealing with someone you agree with on 80% of an issue, how do you resolve the other 20% without causing hard feelings?” he asked the young ambassadors. Though each delegation brought its own nation’s point of view to the Summit, the delegates from all countries shared similar outlooks on several key issues such as climate change and food security.   

The G8 and G20 American delegates chose one member of their group to represent their views on Summit Issues with President Obama. That resulted in one really cool perk for the nominees: new profile pics!!!   

President Obama with Lesley Dudden. Photo credit: Government of Canada

President Obama and Jordan Sanderson during a G8 photo-op. Photo credit: Government of Canada.

HEAR IT FROM THEM!

Thao Anh

Thao Anh shakes hands with a member of the U.K. delegation.

Last month I had the unique opportunity to represent the United States at My Summit 2010, the official youth summits of the G-8 and G-20 held in Canada.
As a Youth Delegate at the G-8 Summit, in addition to having the chance to listen to thought-provoking lectures from guest speakers on the four main themes of terrorism and nuclear non-proliferation, food security, maternal and child health, and climate change, I also got to participate in a negotiation session with Youth Delegates from seven other countries. As an aspiring diplomat, the highlight of the G-8 Summit for me was being able to witness and participate in the intense debate during the terrorism and nuclear non-proliferation negotiation session.  

Though I had a great time participating in the negotiation process, the G-8 Summit was not all work! The event was so memorable for me because I got to meet and befriended with extremely accomplished youths from all over the world. From the meeting with Governor General Michaëlle Jean, to the cruise trip on Muskoka Lake to the bus rides to the Muskoka Heritage Place, I was afforded with the opportunity to network with youths who are not only actively involved within their local community, but also shared my passion for international affairs.  

Although My Summit 2010 only lasted for five days, I am very grateful to have had the honor of representing American youths at both the G-8 and G-20 Summits. While there is no guarantee that the leaders will implement any of the recommendations we made in our communiqué, I am confident that through our well-verse knowledge and undisputed passion, we asserted to these leaders that the international youth community has much to contribute to the policymaking process. As a collective group, we spoke loud and clear that we will use a combination of our knowledge, creativity, and networking ability to commit ourselves in solving global challenges.  

Read more from Thao Anh at her blog.  

   

Melissa Greenaway  

Melissa Greenaway (in the gray suit) poses with American delegates.

When I first arrived in Toronto for the G8 and G20 summits, I had no idea what to expect. Yet by the end of the first night, after a wild ride upon wayward buses, shuttles, and planes with two Americans, one German, and the entire Japanese delegation, I knew that, if nothing else, I would make invaluable connections with many amazing individuals. As I spent the first days haggling over language on food security, the true challenges of crafting international agreements arose. Each country had an agenda, and though we agreed on many things, we were forced to compromise on many others. I felt a huge sense of accomplishment after we finalized our communiqué, and even though I did not get to meet personally with President Obama, I felt extremely lucky to be in such close proximity to him during both summits.  

At the G20 summit, we all felt extremely privileged to be so close to the twenty most influential leaders of the global economy. As an economics major, I was particularly intrigued by the decisions made at the summit, and how they came about. Though we did not hear any of the negotiations, we were allowed to sit in on Prime Minister Harper’s last press conference and the leaders’ photo shoot, clearly showing the importance placed on the youth of the world by the G20 leaders. At the end of the summits I felt empowered to do more, to help more, to motivate others to create change in the world and to let their voices be heard. As was said time and time again, we youth delegates are leaders of today, not tomorrow, and the summits allowed us to present our growing talents to a world waiting for us to step up.  

    

Jordan Sanderson    

Jordan and Danielle Geneux appreciating their VIP status.

The highlight of the trip for me was the opportunity to meet with the G8 leaders at the Deerhurst Resort in Muskoka, Ontario. After passing through numerous security barricades, the seven other delegates from the G8 nations and I made our way to the leaders’ press and negotiating rooms. It was incredible to see the actual room where the G8 leaders discuss and negotiate the G8 communiqué, very similar to what the youth delegates accomplished at MY SUMMIT 2010. Soon after, we were shuffled into to a room filled with press, translators, aides, and of course, the G8 leaders. I had the great fortune of being able to speak freely with President Obama about my background, and the importance of MY SUMMIT 2010 and the general mobilization of youth in the United States. We were also able to present our respective leaders with a copy of the youth communiqué, one that was prepared by all of the G8 delegates and thematically resembled the official G8 communiqué (terrorism and non-nuclear proliferation, climate change, food security and maternal and child health). President Obama was particularly impressed, and said he looked forward to reading the delegates viewpoints on the controversial issues. And finally, to conclude the afternoon by sharing a laugh with President Obama, Chancellor Merkel of Germany and Prime Minister Cameron of the United Kingdom, will undoubtedly be one of the most surreal experiences of my life!  

 

Garrett Harkins   

Garrett Harkins, Jordan, and Thao

My experience at the G-8 and G-20 Summit was both defined and made meaningful by the connections I formed with other young professionals from around the globe. The opportunity to engage with so many future decision makers regarding the most pressing issues of our times was a unique experience that has both enhanced my understanding of international diplomacy and my empathy for the perspectives of other citizenries. As a Pickering Foreign Affairs fellow I am currently on track to enter into the United States Foreign Service upon graduation and it was invaluable to both observe and participate in the G-20 dialogue as I continue to prepare for my eventual career. Understanding how politics, state interests, and national identity affect decision makers at the highest level I know that I have gained valuable insights into the mechanics of international policymaking.  

 

Lesley Dudden   

Lesley Dudden and the other chosen delegates wait for Heads of State at the G20.

Wow. It is hard to believe how much time has already passed since My Summit. When I heard about this program I was not necessarily sure what it would entail; when I was selected I was excited, but I had no idea what I was getting myself into.  

Participating in the negotiations at the My Summit G8 portion was one of the most real things I have ever experienced. In classes and other simulations I have encountered negotiations always centered on presenting the point of view of some other country against a fellow student doing the same. Actually sitting with students from around the world discussing issues directly affecting their countries and them personally really drummed home the reality of issues such as Nuclear Non-Proliferation and Terrorism, Food Security, Maternal Health and Global Warming.  

One of the most exciting parts of My Summit was the opportunity to engage with government officials and other people who work directly with the issues we were discussing during the summit. For the welcoming dinner at the G20 portion I was fortunate enough to get placed at a table with the mayor of Toronto and the President of TD Bank (who was our speaker that night). Listening to them speak and getting to hear them talk even more over dinner was truly inspiring.  

Without a doubt the highlight of my experience, however, was when I got the opportunity to meet with President Obama during the G20 summit. Meeting with the President was truly mind blowing. Even now when people ask me about it I do not quite know how to describe the experience. One second I was standing watching the Saudi King walk into the room and meet his delegate (who was standing next to me) and the next second President Obama was standing in front of me, shaking my hand and addressing me by name. When he heard I had studied abroad in Turkey he quickly moved us down the line and introduced me to the Prime Minister of Turkey (insisting that I practice my Turkish on him). It was really nerve racking. Later he introduced me to Rahm Emmanuel. Before I got my head wrapped around being in the presence of all the leaders we had reached the end of our visit and I was put back on an elevator back up to the rest of the group.  

My Summit was truly a once in a lifetime experience. I developed friendships with young leaders from 20 different countries as well as my own. Canada is truly a beautiful country and its citizens were very cordial and excited to be hosting us and this monumental event.  

  

Patrick Short  

Patrick Short with Mr. Paul Tergat, U.N. World.

My Summit 2010 was created to empower youth to make a difference and express their views. Through this summit, we were connected with other young leaders from across the globe to meet, network, exchange ideas, and forge cross-cultural bonds. Throughout the G8 and G20 Youth Summits, we heard from a variety of experts on many different topics from Climate Change to International Banking to Child and Maternal Health. At the end of each keynote, we were given the opportunity to ask our own questions to the speakers, opening up the floor to an inundation of ideas, critiques, analyses, and discussion. The atmosphere was thick with enthusiasm. Everyone seemed eager to learn, discuss, and attempt to solve such complex issues. My Summit 2010 provided an incredible opportunity to hear from renowned and experienced speakers on such important and ever-evolving topics. 

While there were many different standpoints and views on these complex issues across country lines, the youth shared a particular optimism and spirit of change that often transcended geographical and cultural boundaries. According to one youth delegate from Brazil, he had an unfavorable outlook toward the United States before the summit. Within only a few days at the summit, however, he found himself among friendly and outgoing U.S. Delegates, altering his perceptions forever and forming lasting friendships. Interactions such as these were at the very core of the youth summit. I found myself interacting with Chinese youth leaders, Mexican businessmen, Canadian climate change activists, and English law students in the same conversation. International barriers were erased as delegates from across the world learned together, laughed together, and even watched soccer together. If everyone had the chance to form international relationships such as these, we would find ourselves conflicting less, collaborating more, and ushering in a new international community. 

 

Danielle Geneux  

Danielle Geneux (center), Melissa and Lesley ham it up for the camera.

Being selected as a United States junior delegate to the G8 and G20 Summits was truly a most rewarding experience. The knowledge I gained and ideas I developed will undoubtedly benefit me as I work towards my future goals. Throughout the trip our delegation was responsible for representing the United States and, in particular, the opinions of our country’s youth. We discussed and debated the very same issues the G8 leaders were negotiating, and ultimately supplied them with a communiqué outlining our opinions and suggestions for the themes. During the G20 portion of our trip we had the opportunity to listen to experts discuss financial responsibility and our roles in establishing a stable global economy. While the professional aspects of the trip were as valuable as they come, it was the personal relationships I developed that solidified the entire experience as a success. It is remarkable to see that despite cultural differences the youth of the world share innumerable similarities. 

Global Vision and the Canadian government were extremely gracious throughout the entire trip. While much of our week was consumed with deliberations and lectures, we found time to partake in some leisure activities. Canoe rides in Muskoka, outings in Toronto, and sightseeing bus rides with an impromptu tour guide were among the highlights. In addition to the leisure activities our delegation had the wonderful opportunity to meet with David Jacobson, the United States Ambassador to Canada. We also got to watch the leaders of the G20 countries take their “Family Photo.” I still find it hard to believe that I was in the same room as some of the world’s greatest leaders. I couldn’t have asked for a better trip and feel truly fortunate to have experienced all of this with my fellow US delegates, as well as the other delegates from around the world.