Identity, Culture and Community

Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.

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How changing demographics and tastes are shaping Canada’s grocery stores

Rosa Saba, The Canadian Press 6 minute read Preview
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How changing demographics and tastes are shaping Canada’s grocery stores

Rosa Saba, The Canadian Press 6 minute read Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025

It’s mid-December at a large supermarket in Mississauga, Ont., and Christmas music plays softly over the speakers as customers roam the aisles, picking the perfect lemon and eyeing the large olive counter in the middle of the store.

But this isn't just any grocery store. Walk past the produce and the olives, and you'll see trays of tabbouleh, hummus and fattoush, as well as shawarma cooking on rotating spits. Further, you’ll find a large dessert section with neat displays of golden baklava and other sweets. Behind two swinging doors, rows of puffed-up pita bread emerge on a conveyor belt from the oven, ready to be packaged and sold to customers.

This is Adonis, a Middle Eastern grocer that got its start in Montreal in 1978. The grocer is gearing up to open its 16th store, this one in London, Ont., next summer to meet demand from customers who often travel weekly to shop at the Mississauga location.

Specialty stores like Adonis are enjoying growth thanks to not only immigration but also the more diverse tastes of younger generations.

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Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025

Baklava is put into a display counter at the bakery in the Adonis grocery store in Mississauga, Ont. on Monday, December 16, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young

Baklava is put into a display counter at the bakery in the Adonis grocery store in Mississauga, Ont. on Monday, December 16, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Chris Young
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Serving — and feeding — the community

Nicole Buffie 3 minute read Preview
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Serving — and feeding — the community

Nicole Buffie 3 minute read Saturday, Dec. 21, 2024

A group of young Muslim men walked up and down Main Street Saturday morning offering sandwiches, loaves of bread and cans of pop to Winnipeg’s homeless population in the spirit of holiday giving.

“This is what I was taught from a very young age, to volunteer for a good cause and to give back,” said Faraad Tahir, who has been a part of the Ahmadiyya Muslim Youth Association since he was a boy.

Tahir and others from the 50-person group spent the morning making more than 100 sandwiches before loading up their vehicles and heading downtown. The group handed out the food and drinks to people outside of Main Street Project and Siloam Mission before they planned to give out the remainder — if there was any — at Portage Place.

Tahir, 22, came to Winnipeg from Pakistan as a child and immediately felt the group’s community support.

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Saturday, Dec. 21, 2024

NICOLE BUFFIE / FREE PRESS

The youth group, which has some 50 members, says to give back is to follow their Muslim faith, which teaches charity and service to one’s community.

NICOLE BUFFIE / FREE PRESS
                                The youth group, which has some 50 members, says to give back is to follow their Muslim faith, which teaches charity and service to one’s community.
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Pervasive poverty demonstrates an unjust society

Andrew Lodge 5 minute read Monday, Dec. 16, 2024

Althea waits in line at a local food bank in Winnipeg. Her youngest son, less than six months old, is bundled up asleep in a stroller and she holds her two-year-old in her arms. Nearby, her oldest son, now four, plays with a toy car.

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Poll highlights belief in rising corruption

Gabrielle Piché 4 minute read Friday, Nov. 29, 2024

Manitobans’ trust in businesses — and government’s ability to address corruption — is on a downhill slope, a new Angus Reid Institute poll found.

“I feel like things are getting more and more shifty, especially after COVID,” said Will Houston, as he shopped in a Winnipeg supermarket this week.

Prices across the board have skyrocketed over the past few years, he noted.

“I fully acknowledge that there are supply chains and there’s people who need to be paid all the way back to the producer,” Houston said. “But I think that there are people who are taking a higher cut than they used to.”

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Les Aces de Saint-Anne lancent une soirée francophone

André Boisjoli 3 minute read Preview
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Les Aces de Saint-Anne lancent une soirée francophone

André Boisjoli 3 minute read Saturday, Nov. 23, 2024

Le Comité culturel de Sainte-Anne lance sa première soirée de hockey francophone. Le 7 décembre à 19 h, les Aces de Sainte-Anne affronteront les Hawks de Notre Dame à l’aréna Maurice-Chaput.

L’idée vient de la “voix des Aces” Marc Connelly, s’inspirant des soirées thématiques dans les sports professionnels. “C’est une manière d’encourager les gens à venir à nos parties,” explique-t-il.

Peu après avoir proposé l’évènement à sa mère, Diane Connelly, secrétaire au Comité culturel, un nouveau sous-comité a vu le jour pour organiser la soirée.

“On veut essayer de mettre autant de français qu’on peut dans la fête, ajoute Diane Connelly. Une grande soirée est planifiée, car on veut que la ville sache, qu’au rural, on fait des choses!”

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Saturday, Nov. 23, 2024

Mehdi Bereddad photo

L’idée vient de la ‘voix des Aces’ Marc Connelly, s’inspirant des soirées thématiques dans les sports professionnels.

Mehdi Bereddad photo
                                L’idée vient de la ‘voix des Aces’ Marc Connelly, s’inspirant des soirées thématiques dans les sports professionnels.
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The gift of hijab: Fashion designer found empowerment in modesty

AV Kitching 7 minute read Preview
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The gift of hijab: Fashion designer found empowerment in modesty

AV Kitching 7 minute read Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2024

As a Muslim woman living in Canada, Hafsa Altaf faced countless challenges on multiple fronts when navigating the fashion industry as a woman in a hijab.

Rejected by local trade shows and craft markets and criticized by detractors in the South Asian community who disapproved of her sartorial ambitions, the 27-year-old artist and designer remained undaunted.

Undeterred by naysayers, she relentlessly called and emailed event organizers, determined to convey the values and mission of her label, Fashion by Hafsa.

Facing down the conservatism of her community was an altogether different struggle, but it was also one of the “greatest things” she has ever done, says the Pakistani-born Canadian, who moved to Saskatchewan with her family when she was four.

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Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2024

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS

Hafsa Altaf moved to Saskatoon from Pakistan at age four; she came to Winnipeg to study fashion design.

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS
                                Hafsa Altaf moved to Saskatoon from Pakistan at age four; she came to Winnipeg to study fashion design.
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Miss Shakespeare turns gender bias on its ear

Holly Harris 5 minute read Preview
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Miss Shakespeare turns gender bias on its ear

Holly Harris 5 minute read Sunday, Sep. 29, 2024

Winnipeg Studio Theatre kicked off its season with the guts and glory of female empowerment in its all-women-led local premiere of Miss Shakespeare.

The two-hour musical — directed by company artistic director Erin McGrath and presented by Rainbow Stage — runs through Oct. 5 at the University of Winnipeg’s Asper Centre for Theatre and Film. Saturday night’s crowd eagerly lapped up its feminist ethos.

Its quasi-historical protagonist, Judith Shakespeare (played by a spunky Rhea Rodych-Rasidescu), is the Bard’s real-life daughter “born with a poetic soul.” Judith lives in the shadows of her famous father during the repressive 1600s, when women were relegated to becoming wives and mothers, rather than pursuing their own passions.

Judith yearns for her own identity as a self-actualized creative powerhouse, and cobbles together the “Gossips,” a merry band of like-minded women who surreptitiously meet each week in the bowels of The Cage tavern to create a play. They spar, share stories, and dream, risking public humiliation if they’re discovered treading the boards like their male counterparts.

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Sunday, Sep. 29, 2024

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS Rhea Rodych-Rasidescu (centre) and others run through a scene on Thursday, Sept. 12, 2024. An all-woman cast and crew are behind the upcoming Winnipeg Studio Theatre-Rainbow Stage presentation of Miss Shakespeare. For arts story. Winnipeg Free Press 2024

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS Rhea Rodych-Rasidescu (centre) and others run through a scene on Thursday, Sept. 12, 2024. An all-woman cast and crew are behind the upcoming Winnipeg Studio Theatre-Rainbow Stage presentation of Miss Shakespeare. For arts story. Winnipeg Free Press 2024
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Vehicle hits cyclist at downtown protest about woman fatally struck by police cruiser

Nicole Buffie 7 minute read Preview
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Vehicle hits cyclist at downtown protest about woman fatally struck by police cruiser

Nicole Buffie 7 minute read Thursday, Sep. 5, 2024

A protest at Portage and Main Wednesday, to denounce the death of an Indigenous woman who was fatally struck by a police cruiser, was the scene of violence as officers stayed back from the intersection at the request of demonstrators.

The Winnipeg Police Service said officers “were strategically placed out of view” of the intersection, which had been shut down by about 100 people beginning during the noon hour. The rally was called to mark the death of Tammy Bateman, a homeless woman in her 30s who died after being struck by a police vehicle at the Fort Rouge Park riverside homeless encampment Monday night.

About 20 minutes after the protest began, a driver in a Chrysler New Yorker tried to drive north on Main Street at Portage Avenue, but was blocked by several protesters. The motorist drove through the blockade and struck a cyclist who was blocking the way. The bike was dragged by the vehicle.

Several protesters, who wore vests emblazoned with “Crazy Indians Brotherhood,” jumped on the vehicle and kicked its windshield. Another demonstrator jumped in the passenger side of the vehicle. As the male driver accelerated through the blockade, the protesters fell off and out of the car.

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Thursday, Sep. 5, 2024

NIC ADAM / FREE PRESS
A man drove his vehicle through the protest blocking traffic at Portage and Main on Wednesday about 20 minutes after it began, striking a protester and dragging her bike under his car.
240904 - Wednesday, September 04, 2024.

Reporter: Nicole

NIC ADAM / FREE PRESS
A man drove his vehicle through the protest blocking traffic at Portage and Main on Wednesday about 20 minutes after it began, striking a protester and dragging her bike under his car.
240904 - Wednesday, September 04, 2024.

Reporter: Nicole
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Manitoba bans cellphones for K-8 students

Maggie Macintosh 5 minute read Preview
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Manitoba bans cellphones for K-8 students

Maggie Macintosh 5 minute read Thursday, Aug. 15, 2024

Manitoba has announced a ban on cellphones in elementary schools and strict rules to silence devices and keep them out of sight during Grade 9-12 lessons next month.

Kindergarten to Grade 8 students will be barred from using phones at any point in the school day, including during lunch and recess.

High schoolers will be asked to leave their phones in their locker, with a teacher or at the principal’s office when classes are in session.

Teenagers can access their devices on breaks and when a classroom teacher approves usage for educational purposes.

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Thursday, Aug. 15, 2024

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS

Education minister Nello Altomare shows new school signage (related to the cell phone ban) in his office at the Manitoba Legislative Building.

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS

	
Education minister Nello Altomare shows new school signage (related to the cell phone ban) in his office at the Manitoba Legislative Building on Thursday, Aug. 15, 2024. 

For Carol story.
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Canadian news engagement down significantly one year after Meta’s ban: study

The Canadian Press 2 minute read Preview
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Canadian news engagement down significantly one year after Meta’s ban: study

The Canadian Press 2 minute read Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025

MONTREAL - A new study is painting a grim portrait of how local Canadian news outlets are struggling to reach audiences one year after Meta began blocking Canadian news content on its Facebook and Instagram platforms.

The Media Ecosystem Observatory study published today finds that Canadians’ total engagement with news content on social media has been reduced by 43 per cent, despite efforts to increase social media engagement on other platforms.

The social media giant banned Canadian news content after Ottawa passed the Online News Act in June 2023, which compelled tech companies to enter into agreements with news publishers for the use of their content.

Local news outlets, many of which rely on Facebook, have been especially hit hard — 30 per cent of them are now inactive on social media, the study found.

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Wednesday, Oct. 15, 2025

A new report is painting a grim portrait of how local Canadian news outlets are faring one year after Meta began blocking Canadian news content on its Facebook and Instagram platforms. A smartphone showing Meta's blocking of Canadian news content on their Instagram social media app is shown in a photo illustration, in Toronto, Aug. 1, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Giordano Ciampini

A new report is painting a grim portrait of how local Canadian news outlets are faring one year after Meta began blocking Canadian news content on its Facebook and Instagram platforms. A smartphone showing Meta's blocking of Canadian news content on their Instagram social media app is shown in a photo illustration, in Toronto, Aug. 1, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Giordano Ciampini
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Muslim community optimistic about alternative financing plan

John Longhurst 3 minute read Tuesday, May. 21, 2024

Manitoba Muslims are welcoming news Ottawa plans to make it easier for them to buy a house in a way that is consistent with their faith.

In delivering the federal government’s budget in April, Finance Minister Chrystia Freeland announced officials would be “exploring new measures to expand access to alternative financing products, like halal mortgages.”

She added the government has been consulting financial services providers and diverse communities, and that an update would come in the fall economic statement.

Sheikh Ismael Mukhtar of the Manitoba Islamic Association said the news is positive.

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Introductory course on Islam offered

John Longhurst 3 minute read Monday, May. 6, 2024

Delvinder Zamir converted to Islam and then began the journey to learn more about her new faith.

“I needed to learn the basics,” said the 34-year-old, who converted from Sikhism.

In 2021, Zamir took an introductory course about Islam through the Manitoba Islamic Association.

“It was about how Islam came to be, about the Prophet and about the basic obligations for Muslims such as prayer, fasting, charity and pilgrimage,” she said.

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Pride and passion stitched right in

AV Kitching 4 minute read Preview
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Pride and passion stitched right in

AV Kitching 4 minute read Saturday, Mar. 23, 2024

Surrounded by vibrant textiles, Oluwayemisi Josephine Ogunwale, or Yemz, as she likes to be referred to, sits at her sewing machine, brow furrowed in concentration as she stitches the hem of a dress.

The tools of her trade within easy reach — fabric scissors, measuring tapes, cottons of various shades — Ogunwale is in her happy place: creating beautiful and wearable works of art for her loyal clientele.

The dressmaker has always been interested in fashion. As a child she would sew doll clothing from scraps of material her mother discarded. This progressed to altering her own clothes: modifying hems, adjusting frills, loosening or tightening waistlines.

“Sometimes I would destroy the clothes because of how many changes I made to it,” she laughs.

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Saturday, Mar. 23, 2024

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS

Dressmaker Oluwayemisi Josephine Ogunwale sports one of her pieces.

MIKAELA MACKENZIE / FREE PRESS
                                Dressmaker Oluwayemisi Josephine Ogunwale sports one of her pieces.
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Some doctors sneak education into their online content to drown out misinformation

Nicole Thompson, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Preview
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Some doctors sneak education into their online content to drown out misinformation

Nicole Thompson, The Canadian Press 5 minute read Friday, Oct. 10, 2025

TORONTO - When Dr. Siobhan Deshauer makes online videos, her primary goal is to demystify medicine. Her secondary goal?

"I call it 'smuggling in education,'" said the physician and YouTuber, who boasts nearly a million subscribers on the platform. "You're coming for this mystery and this excitement, but I'm smuggling in some topics that I think are really important and that I'm passionate about."

Some experts say one of the best ways to fight a rising tide of medical misinformation on social media is to drown it out with captivating content backed by science, and Deshauer, an Ontario-based internal medicine and rheumatology specialist, is among a growing cohort of doctors and researchers doing just that.

Take one of her medical mystery videos, for example. In it, Deshauer tells the story of a woman who had lead poisoning. Doctors took ages to figure out what was causing her symptoms, but ultimately realized they were a result of lead in the Ayurvedic supplements she was taking.

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Friday, Oct. 10, 2025

Some experts say one of the best ways to fight a rising tide of medical misinformation on social media is to drown it out with captivating content backed by science, and Dr. Siobhan Deshauer, an Ontario-based internal medicine and rheumatology specialist, is among a growing cohort of doctors and researchers doing just that. Deshauer's channel on YouTube is shown in a photo illustration made in Toronto, Friday, March 15, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Giordano Ciampini

Some experts say one of the best ways to fight a rising tide of medical misinformation on social media is to drown it out with captivating content backed by science, and Dr. Siobhan Deshauer, an Ontario-based internal medicine and rheumatology specialist, is among a growing cohort of doctors and researchers doing just that. Deshauer's channel on YouTube is shown in a photo illustration made in Toronto, Friday, March 15, 2024. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Giordano Ciampini
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Frustrated educators disconnecting distracted students from devices

Maggie Macintosh 4 minute read Preview
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Frustrated educators disconnecting distracted students from devices

Maggie Macintosh 4 minute read Thursday, Feb. 8, 2024

More school leaders across Manitoba are asking students to unplug themselves entirely during lesson times and requesting staff to be role models around positive phone-use.

Tuxedo’s Laidlaw School, Collège Béliveau in Windsor Park and West Kildonan Collegiate are among those that have announced stricter guidelines surrounding personal devices in 2024.

“Ultimately, we want our kids to disconnect with their devices and reconnect with their classmates and teacher,” said Adam Hildebrandt, principal of West Kildonan Collegiate. “We think this really is the best thing for their learning.”

Hildebrandt began his career at the high school in 2004. It was around 2010 when it became commonplace for his students to carry personal devices everywhere they went, and his classroom was no exception.

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Thursday, Feb. 8, 2024

BROOK JONES / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS

Grade 12 students Calan Duchart, Amy Klos and Rachel Mickall put their cell phones in a cell phone storage pouch fastened to the wall while in their pre-calculus classroom at West Kildonan Collegiate in Winnipeg, Man., Thursday, Feb. 8, 2024. West Kildonan Collegiate is one example among a number of schools across school divisions in Winnipeg that are implementing strict cell phone guidelines for the second semester.

BROOK JONES / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
                                Grade 12 students Calan Duchart, Amy Klos and Rachel Mickall put their cell phones in a cell phone storage pouch fastened to the wall while in their pre-calculus classroom at West Kildonan Collegiate in Winnipeg, Man., Thursday, Feb. 8, 2024. West Kildonan Collegiate is one example among a number of schools across school divisions in Winnipeg that are implementing strict cell phone guidelines for the second semester.
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Riel’s vision grows stronger

Niigaan Sinclair 4 minute read Preview
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Riel’s vision grows stronger

Niigaan Sinclair 4 minute read Friday, Nov. 24, 2023

As the first visionary of Manitoba, Riel fought the rest of his life to stop British domination and destruction of Indigenous lives, while stubbornly maintain the independent and unique multicultural spirit that birthed this place.

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Friday, Nov. 24, 2023

Manitoba’s new government introduce its first bill: the Louis Riel Act, which would see Riel be given the honorary title of the province's first premier. (Ruth Bonneville / Winnipeg Free Press files)

RUTH BONNEVILLE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS FILES
                                A new motion is calling for an image of Métis leader Louis Riel to be placed in Winnipeg city council chambers.
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Esports competitions motivating force for First Nations students, educators say

Maggie Macintosh 5 minute read Preview
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Esports competitions motivating force for First Nations students, educators say

Maggie Macintosh 5 minute read Monday, Oct. 30, 2023

Esports clubs are allowing First Nations students to play against peers from other on-reserve schools without the costly and time-intensive trips required for basketball, hockey and other traditional extracurriculars.

For teacher Karl Hildebrandt, one of the many motivators to grow Manitoba’s online gaming community is giving youth in rural and remote areas more competitive opportunities to represent their schools.

“When you tell kids they can play video games at school, their eyes open and when you tell them you can compete against another school in the province, their mouths drop,” said Hildebrandt, director of rural and northern esports for the Manitoba School Esports Association.

A handful of members of the Manitoba First Nations School System, including Lake Manitoba, Brokenhead, Fox Lake, Roseau River and York Landing, have started developing cybersport programs. Some teachers have also started integrating online games into their everyday lessons.

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Monday, Oct. 30, 2023

RUTH BONNEVILLE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS

Desjarlais shows one of her designs to her teacher, Vanessa Lathlin.

RUTH BONNEVILLE / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
                                Desjarlais shows one of her designs to her teacher, Vanessa Lathlin.
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New Islamic school set to open in city

Brenda Suderman 4 minute read Preview
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New Islamic school set to open in city

Brenda Suderman 4 minute read Saturday, Jun. 17, 2023

While students and teachers look forward to the end of classes, new school trustee Delvinder Zamir anticipates piles of summer homework.

As the board chair of the yet-unnamed new Islamic elementary school supported by the Manitoba Islamic Association, Zamir plans to hire teachers, furnish classrooms and buy supplies before the institution opens its doors in September.

“It will be nice to see parents and kids come to a spiritual place where they can use it in a different way,” she says of the kindergarten to Grade 4 school to be based out of Winnipeg Grand Mosque and Community Centre on Waverley Street.

The fourth Islamic school in Winnipeg, this one is the first located at a mosque and run as a project by Manitoba Islamic Association, and the only one in southwest Winnipeg, says Zamir, who also serves as second vice-president of the MIA board. Members asked for a community-run Islamic school at the mosque since they faced waiting lists at other schools, she says.

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Saturday, Jun. 17, 2023
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Raising up books as social justice tools

AV kitching 5 minute read Preview
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Raising up books as social justice tools

AV kitching 5 minute read Saturday, Feb. 18, 2023

Valerie Chelangat spends her days reading. She reads every day, mostly in the morning, sometimes before bed in the evenings and, if she has time to spare, in the hours between.

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Saturday, Feb. 18, 2023

Tamana Shahnawaz photo Valerie Chelangat the proprietor of Tusome Books is a proponent of intentional reading; an approach to books which encourages readers to widen the scope of what and who they read.

Tamana Shahnawaz photo Valerie Chelangat the proprietor of Tusome Books is a proponent of intentional reading; an approach to books which encourages readers to widen the scope of what and who they read.
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The joke’s on us as social media capitalizes on our base impulses in race to the bottom

Melissa Martin 7 minute read Preview
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The joke’s on us as social media capitalizes on our base impulses in race to the bottom

Melissa Martin 7 minute read Friday, Dec. 16, 2022

The most important thing we can teach ourselves, and our children, about how to navigate social media is this: the algorithms want you to be angry. They want you to be angry, because it is good for business.

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Friday, Dec. 16, 2022
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Conspiracy theories are dangerous even if they don’t affect behaviour

Lara Millman, PhD Student, Philosophy, Dalhousie University, The Conversation 6 minute read Friday, Oct. 10, 2025

This article was originally published on The Conversation, an independent and nonprofit source of news, analysis and commentary from academic experts. Disclosure information is available on the original site.

___

Author: Lara Millman, PhD Student, Philosophy, Dalhousie University

Much has been made in recent years of politicians like Donald Trump and their use of conspiracy theories. In Canada, a number of conservative politicians have voiced support for conspiracy theories.

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Group engages community on renaming Wolseley neighbourhood

Malak Abas 4 minute read Preview
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Group engages community on renaming Wolseley neighbourhood

Malak Abas 4 minute read Monday, Aug. 30, 2021

In 1870, Col. Garnet Wolseley led a military expedition into Manitoba to violently overthrow Louis Riel’s provisional government at the Red River Colony. On Sunday afternoon, a group gathered at Vimy Ridge Park to discuss how to push for the renaming of the neighbourhood that bears his name.

Red River Echoes, a Métis collective that first came together with the purpose of “bringing an alternative voice to what Métis people think in Manitoba” after Manitoba Metis Federation president David Chartrand put out an ad with the Winnipeg Free Press in March in support of the Winnipeg Police Service, put together the rendezvous to take questions and comments community members might have around the growing conversation to rename Wolseley.

"With a lot of names being changed right now, we thought it was a good opportunity,” Red River Echoes member Claire Johnston said. “And Wolseley in particular has a really violent and negative association for Métis people, and also all other people of colour in who live in Winnipeg.”

In the months since the remains of 215 children were found in unmarked graves near a residential school in Kamloops, B.C., calls have been sparked across the country to rename landmarks named after people who had a hand in the colonization of Canada. In Winnipeg, Wolseley isn’t the first instance — calls to rename Bishop Grandin Boulevard due to its namesake’s hand in the residential school system have resulted in consultations and a possible recommendation for its renaming coming to city council this fall.

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Monday, Aug. 30, 2021

JOHN WOODS / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
People take part in a Red River Echoes community meeting at Vimy Ridge Park to discuss renaming the Wolseley neighbourhood in Winnipeg on Sunday.

JOHN WOODS / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
People take part in a Red River Echoes community meeting at Vimy Ridge Park to discuss renaming the Wolseley neighbourhood in Winnipeg on Sunday.
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Protesters gather at corner to oppose funding of pipeline

Cody Sellar 3 minute read Preview
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Protesters gather at corner to oppose funding of pipeline

Cody Sellar 3 minute read Monday, Aug. 23, 2021

About 50 people from Winnipeg’s Mennonite community gathered Sunday at a TD Bank at the corner of Notre Dame Avenue and Sherbrook Street to protest the bank’s funding of the Line 3 pipeline replacement.

As rain pelted down on a canopy of umbrellas, one man cut his TD Bank card into pieces while the crowd cheered. After some minutes of song and prayer, the group took non-permanent markers and wrote messages over the windows of the bank.

“Stop fossil fuel funding,” one man wrote on the door. The red ink ran in long streaks from the rain down over the bank’s hours.

Organizer Steve Heinrichs said he drew inspiration from Indigenous communities leading protests in Minnesota.

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Monday, Aug. 23, 2021

JOHN WOODS / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
About 50 people gathered outside a TD Bank at Notre Dame Avenue and Sherbrook Street Sunday.

JOHN WOODS / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
About 50 people gathered outside a TD Bank at Notre Dame Avenue and Sherbrook Street Sunday.
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Black History Manitoba's block party opportunity for chefs to share their passion

Melissa Martin 6 minute read Preview
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Black History Manitoba's block party opportunity for chefs to share their passion

Melissa Martin 6 minute read Monday, Aug. 23, 2021

As a little girl growing up in Jamaica, Patrice Gilman dreamed that one day, she would cook just like Gladys, her grandmother. Everyone around downtown Kingston knew Gladys, and the little restaurant she owned in the area called Southside. Her dish of tripe and beans was famous, and fed famous athletes and hungry kids alike.

Gilman was fascinated by watching her grandmother manage the little kitchen, cooking all on her own, darting between pots of goat or chicken or fish bubbling on any of a dozen wood-fired stoves. Every morning, Gladys rose before the sun to start making lunch, and every day she was sold out of food not long after noon.

Still, she always had a little something for the kids who hung around, the ones who didn’t have enough.

“She was a one-woman show,” Gilman says. “She would feed the whole community. She had nine children, and raised many more children that weren’t her own. She passed away about 13 years ago, but her spirit lives on so strongly in our family’s heart.”

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Monday, Aug. 23, 2021

Deidré Coleman (left) and Patrice Gilman are taking part in this month's Black History Manitoba block party, dishing up Caribbean food from their West End restaurant. (Mikaela MacKenzie / Winnipeg Free Press)

Deidré Coleman (left) and Patrice Gilman are taking part in this month's Black History Manitoba block party, dishing up Caribbean food from their West End restaurant. (Mikaela MacKenzie / Winnipeg Free Press)