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Exploring Blackhurst Cultural Centre (Article)

“Exploring Blackhurst Cultural Centre” provides students with information about an important community hub for members of the Black community in Toronto. This cultural centre was once a bookstore and has evolved into a vibrant community space. First known as A Different Booklist, the Blackhurst Cultural Centre is located in downtown Toronto, in a neighbourhood that celebrates “a rich African, Caribbean, and Black Canadian legacy.” The bookstore offers a range of free programming, including mentorship programs for Black youth. Store-run tours tell the history of the neighbourhood and amplify the contributions of Black community members. With big plans for future development, including an art gallery, tech hub, and scholar-in-residence program, the owners see the cultural centre as a place where young and old feel they “are at the centre and never at the margins.” As students read this text, they are asked to consider what a cultural hub is and how it serves a community. They then explore the idea of such a space in their own community.

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King of Stories (an original short play)

In “King of Stories,” siblings Joshua and Jacqueline visit their local Afro Caribbean cultural centre, where they hear a Caribbean Anansi story. They learn about the origin of these stories and that Anansi is a trickster creature, usually a spider, who finds creative ways to escape trouble. The play explores the importance of storytelling and looks at the way stories travel and change across cultures.

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Discovering Gang Gang Sara (an original short story)

In this Learning Object, 12-year-old Janet, who is an orphan, travels to Trinidad and Tobago where her uncle tells her the legend of Gang Gang Sara. Gang Gang Sara is a figure from Caribbean legend who is said to have “blown from Africa” to Tobago in the 1700s. Gang Gang Sara’s story, like Janet’s, is about longing for home and a place to belong. Students make connections as they read. They later share a story that is important to them.

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The Contract (an original short story)

“The Contract” is a short story about a teenager who wants a cellphone but is met with resistance by her mother, who thinks she is still too young. Amanda is almost fourteen, and her older brother and most of her friends at school have cellphones. But Amanda’s mother is worried that having a cellphone may change their relationship, affect Amanda’s schoolwork, and leave her open to cyberbullying. The story concludes on an open note: will Amanda’s mother agree to Amanda’s terms and let her get a cellphone?

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Oliver Bowen: Changing a City

The Oliver Bowen Maintenance Facility (OBMF) is located in northeast Calgary, Alberta. It took a lot of money to build this facility. This is the place where the Calgary light rail transit (LRT) vehicles are washed, fixed, and stored.

This facility helps keep the transportation system in Calgary running smoothly. The name of this facility is no accident. It is named for the man who designed and managed Calgary’s first light rail transit line: Oliver Bowen.

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Lawrence Hill: Writing with Passion

What are you passionate about doing? Have you tried it and found you are not very good at it? That is exactly what happened to writer Lawrence Hill.

Hill’s first goal was to be a runner. He was passionate about it! It was his dream to win an Olympic gold medal in the 5000 metres.

However, after training by running thousands of kilometres, Lawrence Hill discovered that he just couldn’t run fast enough to get an Olympic gold medal. Instead of seeing himself as a failure, Hill found another passion—one that has probably made him more famous than he would have been if he had succeeded at becoming an Olympic runner.

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Esi Edugyan: Finding Home

Esi Edugyan, novelist (born 1978 in Calgary, AB). Esi Edugyan is a Ghanaian Canadian novelist whose work has become an influential part of the Canadian literary canon. Imbued with an interest in Black histories and the Black diaspora, her novels explore ideas of nation and belonging. They also examine the effects of Black migration and the resulting presence of Black subjects in predominantly white societies. Her novels Half-Blood Blues (2011) and Washington Black (2018) both won the Scotiabank Giller Prize, making her only the third writer to win the award twice.

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