Category: Awareness

apr6
Awareness

April 6 marks International Asexuality Day, a day dedicated to raising awareness about asexuality and celebrating the asexual community. Asexuality is a sexual orientation characterized by a lack of sexual attraction to others. While asexuality is often misunderstood or dismissed, it is a valid and important aspect of human diversity. 

The asexual community faces unique challenges in a world that often equates sexual attraction with human value. Many asexual individuals report feeling isolated or misunderstood, and may struggle to find acceptance within both Gender, Sexual, and Relationship Diversity (GSRD) and straight communities. International Asexuality Day seeks to combat this marginalization by increasing visibility and understanding of asexuality. 

One common misconception about asexuality is that it means a lack of romantic attraction as well. However, many asexual individuals do experience romantic attraction and may form deep, meaningful relationships with others. These relationships may or may not include physical intimacy, and asexuality does not necessarily indicate a lack of desire for emotional connection. 

It’s important to recognize and celebrate the diversity of human sexuality and to support those who identify as asexual. By spreading awareness and fostering inclusivity, we can help create a world in which everyone is accepted and valued for who they are. Happy International Asexuality Day! 

apr2
Awareness

International Children’s Book Day is a celebration of the transformative power of literature for young readers. It’s a day to recognize and honor the importance of books in shaping the minds of future generations. In the spirit of inclusivity and diversity, we’ve compiled a list of six children’s books that cover Gender, Sexual, and Relationship Diversity (GSRD) topics, helping to promote understanding and acceptance for all children. 

Love Makes a Family  
Sophie Beer 

Love is baking a special cake. Love is lending a helping hand. Love is reading one more book. In this exuberant board book, many different families are shown in happy activity, from an early-morning wake-up to a kiss before bed. Whether a child has two moms, two dads, one parent, or one of each, this simple preschool read-aloud demonstrates that what’s most important in each family’s life is the love the family members share. 

My Own Way: Celebrating Gender Freedom for Kids 
Joana Estrela and Jay Hulme 

Small children are often asked to choose between a gendered binary–“boy” or “girl”, “pink” or “blue”. This colorful picture book smashes these stereotypes and encourages the reader to follow their own way! 

The Circles All Around Us 
Brad Montague 

This is the story of a circle. When we’re first born, our circle is very small, but as we grow and build relationships, our circle keeps getting bigger and bigger to include family, friends, neighbors, community, and beyond. Brad Montague originally created Circles as an Instagram video adorably narrated by his kids, and now this picture book adaptation is the perfect way to start a conversation about how to expand our worlds with kindness and inclusivity—even if it seems scary or uncomfortable. This book makes an ideal new-baby, first day of school, or graduation gift, or any milestone that celebrates someone’s world getting bigger. 

Stella Brings the Family 
Miriam B. Schiffer 

Stella’s class is having a Mother’s Day celebration, but what’s a girl with two daddies to do? It’s not that she doesn’t have someone who helps her with her homework or tucks her in at night. Stella has her Papa and Daddy who take care of her, and a whole gaggle of other loved ones who make her feel special and supported every day. She just doesn’t have a mom to invite to the party. Fortunately, Stella finds a unique solution to her party problem in this sweet story about love, acceptance, and the true meaning of family. 

Love Is Love 
Michael Genhart 

When a boy confides in his friend about bullies saying he doesn’t have a real family, he discovers that his friend’s parents―a mom and a dad―and his two dads are actually very much alike. Dr. Michael Genhart’s debut story is the perfect resource to gently discuss discrimination with kids. This sweet and straightforward story shows that gay families and straight families and everything in between are all different kinds of normal. What makes a family real is the love that is shared. 

Pink, Blue, and You! Questions for Kids about Gender Stereotypes 
Elise Gravel 
Is it okay for boys to cry? Can girls be strong? Should girls and boys be given different toys to play with and different clothes to wear? Should we all feel free to love whoever we choose to love? In this incredibly kid-friendly and easy-to-grasp picture book, author-illustrator Elise Gravel and transgender collaborator Mykaell Blais raise these questions and others relating to gender roles, acceptance, and stereotyping. 

Apr1
Awareness

National Diversity Month is a time to celebrate and appreciate the unique differences that make our world a more vibrant and inclusive place. As we celebrate diversity, it is important to recognize and honor the contributions of marginalized communities, including the Gender, Sexual, and Relationship Diversity (GSRD) community. 

One way to celebrate National Diversity Month with pride is to actively seek out and support GSRD organizations and events. Attend a local Pride parade or rally, donate to organizations advocating for GSRD rights, or volunteer your time to support GSRD youth programs. 

Another way to celebrate is by educating yourself and others about the history and struggles of the GSRD community. Read books and articles written by GSRD authors, watch documentaries and films about GSRD history, and engage in discussions with community members to deepen your understanding and empathy. 

Finally, celebrating National Diversity Month with pride means being an ally to the GSRD community. Speak out against discrimination and hate, use inclusive language, and confront prejudice when you witness it. By standing in solidarity with GSRD individuals, we can help create a more just and equitable world for all. 

mar31
Awareness

An annual awareness day, known as “Trans Day of Visibility,” is observed worldwide with the goal of raising awareness of the work that still needs to be done to attain trans justice while also honouring the accomplishments of transgender and gender nonconforming persons. While much has been achieved since the turn of the millennium, including the legalization of same-sex marriage in 2005 and the protection of gender expression and identity in the Criminal Code and Canadian Human Rights Act in 2017, there are still issues. For example, transgender people were still more likely to encounter unwanted behaviour at work, online, or in public places in 2018. 

In 2020, 259 hate crimes that targeted individuals based on sexual orientation were registered by police. This figure was higher than in past years since comparable data have been available, albeit it did reflect a minor decline from a peak in 2019. 

The International Transgender Day of Visibility serves as a reminder that we can all work together to safeguard and advance the human rights of Canadians who identify as lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, queer, or who otherwise use a term that denotes gender or sexual diversity. Regardless of a person’s sexual orientation or gender identity or expression, all persons have universal and inalienable rights. 

For the first time, a gender question was added to the sex at birth question in the 2021 Census of Population. By using a two-step process, Statistics Canada will be able to collect accurate data on the transgender and non-binary community, filling in knowledge gaps about gender diversity in Canada. Statistics Canada will be able to recognize partnerships in which at least one member is transgender or non-binary for the first time thanks to the addition of gender to the 2021 Census. This will give a fuller picture of the increasingly diverse families in Canada. 

CPHS_wpd3-1
Awareness

World Poetry Day, which is observed annually on March 21st, honours one of humanity’s most cherished forms of cultural and linguistic expression and identity. Poetry has been used historically in every culture and on every continent, speaking to our shared values and our shared humanity. Even the most basic poems can work as a strong spark for communication and peace. 

Billeh Nickerson (he/him) 
Nickerson is the co-editor of the ground-breaking anthology Seminal: The Anthology of Canada’s Gay Male Poets and the past-editor of both Event and Prism International. He co-chairs the creative writing department at Kwantlen Polytechnic University, where he lives and works, and he has previously served as a writer-in-residence at Queen’s University in Kingston, Ontario, and Berton House in Dawson City, Yukon. The Asthmatic Glassblower, McPoems, Impact: The Titanic Poems, Artificial Cherry, and the humour collection Let Me Kiss It Better are only a few of the works of Billeh. 

Larissa Lai (she/her)  
Lai is a prolific writer who has received high praise for her work in criticism, poetry, and fiction. Her books examine the Chinese and Chinese-Canadian experience through a writing style influenced by mythology, science fiction, and an awareness of the effects of transnational experience in the neoliberal period. She has authored eight books, including Salt Fish Girl, Automaton Biographies, and When Fox is a Thousand. Lai teaches literature at the University of British Columbia and has served as Writer-in-Residence at Simon Fraser University and the University of Calgary. 

Margaret Christakos (she/her)  
Bisexual poet, author, image-maker, and poetry mentor Margaret Christakos was born in Sudbury, Canada. She is well known for her poetry, and her body of work consists of ten poetry collections, ten chapbooks, a novel, and an intergenre biography. Christakos has served as Writer in Residence at the University of Windsor, Western University, London Public Library, and the University of Alberta; she will serve as Writer in Residence at Green College, UBC, beginning in the fall of 2021. She serves as adjunct instructor for the University of Guelph-MFA Humber’s in creative writing. 

 

Nicole Brossard (she/her) 
After releasing her debut collection of poetry, Aube à la saison, in 1965, Montreal author Nicole Brossard worked tirelessly for decades to establish herself as a major figure in Canadian poetry. Her impressive body of work unapologetically echoes her claim that “loving a woman is always political.” The fact that Brossard participated actively in the feminist movement in the middle of the 1970s has influenced all the non-poetic literary work she has done, from helping to publish an anthology of Quebec women’s writing to co-founding the feminist weekly Les Têtes de pioche. The 1987 book Le Désert mauve, which will soon be adapted into an opera, and her poem “Smooth Horizon of the Verb Love,” an ode to Montreal’s Chez Madame Arthur lesbian bar, are just a few of the many accomplishments of the two-time winner of the Governor General’s Literary Award for poetry in French. 

 

Nisha Patel (she/her)  
Patel is a queer, Indo-Canadian poet who has acted as the Strathcona County and St. Albert’s Regional Writer in Residence and the City of Edmonton’s 8th Poet Laureate. In addition to serving as the Edmonton Poetry Festival’s executive director, Nisha won the 2019 Canadian Individual Slam Championship. Nisha has a Bachelor of Commerce degree with a major in business economics and law from the University of Alberta School of Business. She also holds a Certificate in Leadership. She also works with Moon Jelly House, a tiny press that releases BIPOC poets and voices in limited edition chapbooks. 

Tara Borin (they/them) 
Borin is a queer, nonbinary settler poet who resides and works in Dawson City, Yukon, which is in the traditional territory of the Tr’ondk Hwch’in. Thick, Tara’s chapbook manuscript, was a finalist in Quattro Books’ first Best New Poets in Canada competition. Poems by Tara have appeared in print and online publications such as Prism International, Prairie Fire, The LaHave Review, Red Alder Review, and others. 

MarPosts-03
Awareness

Every year on March 21, the world observes Omnisexual Awareness Day. The event provides an opportunity to recognize the omnisexual community and to spread awareness of their struggles. Attending events, participating in online discussions, and providing resources about the identity are all ways that people may support omnisexuality. It is also a chance to find out more about the distinctive experiences of omnisexual people. 

It is simpler for omnisexuals to communicate with friends and loved ones and experience affection by observing an international day for omnisexuality. Additionally, it encourages enhanced sensitivity and understanding among society at large. 

What does omnisexual mean?  
Omnisexuals are drawn to individuals of all gender identities and sexual orientations. Omnisexuality falls under the umbrella of multisexuality, which also encompasses those who are drawn to several genders. People who identify as omnisexual, as well as individuals who are bisexual, polyamorous, and pansexual, are frequently included in this group. 

Although the terms omnisexual and pansexual, which describe attraction to individuals of any gender identification, can be used interchangeably, they have certain distinctions. The acknowledgement of gender is the main distinction between these two names. Most pansexuals find other people attractive regardless of their gender. People who identify as omnisexual could find gender to be attractive. Both omnisexuals and pansexuals may claim to not be drawn to a particular gender. 

MarPosts-01
Awareness

International Women’s Day honours and celebrates the social, economic, cultural, and political accomplishments of women and girls. It’s also a moment to increase awareness of the efforts still needed to achieve gender equality as well as the progress made in that direction.  

In honour of this day, here are some great GSRD women who have impacted Canada:

Carole Pope 
Carole Pope first gained notoriety as the lead vocalist of Toronto-based 80’s rock band Rough Trade. The band’s 1980 song “High School Confidential” overtly alluded to same-sex desires and included controversial lyrics like “It makes me cream my jeans when she comes my way,” but Canadian listeners embraced Pope. The 1981 Most Promising Female Vocalist of the Year award and the 1983 and 1984 Best Female Vocalist Junos were given to the new wave legend. Unquestionably pushing the limit, Pope helped open doors for gay representation in the Canadian music business. 

 Michelle D. Douglas 
In 1963, Michelle D. Douglas was born in Ottawa. She continued her education at Carleton University where she studied political science and law before enlisting in the military in 1986 at the age of 23. This was the start of a brief but distinguished military career; two years later, she was one of the first female officers in the Special Investigation Unit. But in 1989, she lost her job because she was thought to be a homosexual by the military police. Douglas’ activist career was spurred by this. She filed a lawsuit against the Canadian Armed Forces, claiming, “this is not simply for me. It’s for the people who are still in the Canadian Armed Forces and for those who never had the chance to take this to court.” She successfully challenged the military’s discriminatory policy, and ever since, she has supported numerous groups working to ensure the GRSD population is treated equally. 

Jane Rule 
Jane Rule released Desert of the Heart five years before homosexuality was technically decriminalised in Canada, at a time when same-sex sexual conduct was still punished by a lengthy prison sentence. It was an important work of lesbian literature that set the bar high for how positively and audaciously it portrayed a lesbian romance. “I became, for the media, the only lesbian in Canada,” said Rule, who turned to the newfound fame to promote GSRD rights in Canada. 

Mary-Woo Sims 
Mary Woo Sims, who arrived in Canada as a student, was born in Hong Kong in 1970. She decided to become an activist for human rights. She was the co-chair of the Campaign for Equal Families during the battle to enact Bill 167, the Ontario law that would recognise same-sex couples, and she played a significant part in the struggle for same-sex spousal rights. 

Susan Ursel 
Since being admitted to the bar in 1986, Susan Ursel has practised labour and human rights law. She was a founder and director of the Foundation for Equal Families, which introduced Bill C-23, ending discrimination against same-sex relationships on the federal level, and she battled for Bill 167’s passage in 1994, which would have recognised same-sex couples. She remains an GSRD rights activist and resides in Toronto with her partner Lucy McSweeney.  

Chris Bearchell 
Chris Bearchell started a significant media career in 1975 as the lone lesbian contributor to Toronto’s Body Politic, which ran from 1971 to 1987. The magazine became the voice of the gay liberation movement in Canada as one of the earliest GSRD periodicals in the country. She also got involved with a lot of significant groups and organisations at the time, including the Coalition for Gay Rights in Ontario, the Lesbian Organization of Toronto (LOOT), and the defence of John Damien, a racing steward who was sacked wrongfully because of his sexual orientation. 

Shawna Dempsey & Lorri Millan 
Shawna Dempsey and Lorri Millan, a Winnipeg-based duet, gained attention when they released the educational music video “We’re Talking Vulva” about female genitalia. The performance artists inject queer and gender politics into popular venues where they are generally not present. They were the driving force behind the 1997 One Gay City initiative, which featured bus shelter advertisements that mocked Winnipeg’s previous city slogan, “One Great City.” The agency in charge of the shelters objected to the ads, so they were never put up. This forced the artists to replicate the idea as a series of postcards (the dispute was the subject of a human rights challenge that ended in settlement). You may also be familiar with the performers from Lesbian National Parks and Services, an ongoing performance piece in which the two dress as forest rangers to parody the Canadian tourist stereotype of visiting national parks. 

mar3
Awareness

The goal of Bisexual+ Health Awareness Month is to increase knowledge of the social, economic, and health disparities that affect the bisexual+ (bi, pansexual, fluid, queer, etc.) community, advocate for resources, and motivate activities to enhance the wellbeing of bi+ individuals. 

Despite making up the majority of the GSRD population, the bisexual+ group suffers from much higher rates of physical, sexual, emotional, and social violence and disparities than gay and straight persons, as well as from worse physical, mental, and social health. For transgender persons and bi+ people of colour, the health disparities are significantly more severe. 

Did You Know? 

  • Less than 1% of the funds used to promote GSRD advocacy go to the bisexual+ group, despite making up the bulk of the GSRD population. 
  • Compared to their gay and straight peers, bisexual+ people frequently face higher levels of mental health difficulties, including suicidality, substance use disorders, depression, and anxiety. 
  • Only 29% of people claim to directly know a bisexual+ person, compared to 73% of people who claim to know a gay or lesbian person, even though bisexual+ people make up over half of the GSRD population. 
  • Bisexual+ youth make up 8% of those aged 18 to 34, compared to 3% of their gay and lesbian counterparts, but are less likely than their gay friends to come out to their loved ones. 
  • One study found that 37% of gender-expansive kids experience verbal harassment at school, and another found that 44% of bisexual youth experienced bullying regarding their weight or physical attractiveness at least once in the previous month. 
mar1-1
Awareness

March 1st is Zero Discrimination Day, a chance to celebrate diversity and advance inclusivity. It is also an opportunity to consider how discrimination impacts people and communities and to take steps to make the world more just and equal. The occasion serves as a reminder that everyone is entitled to respect and dignity. 

Discrimination is the unfair or unfavourable treatment of various groups of individuals, frequently based on racial, ethnic, gender, or sexual identity. Although discrimination might be covert and difficult to spot, it can have a profound effect on the lives of individuals who are subjected to it. Zero Discrimination Day aims to raise awareness of the harmful effects of discrimination and inspire people to oppose it. 

Zero Discrimination Day has become an important symbol of the need to promote and protect fundamental human rights, such as the rights to life, liberty, equality, and dignity. It is a day to recognise that the power of collective action can bring about positive change. 

  1. Increase Awareness of Discriminatory Laws
    Call attention to it if your local government is considering adopting a discriminatory law or if your existing laws have holes that permit discrimination. Utilize social media to raise awareness of these regulations among more people.
  2. Defend Against Discrimination
    Call it out if you see discrimination in your regular life, whether it’s at work, at school, in the gym, or in a public place. It’s crucial for discrimination victims to have outspoken allies because they might not always be able to advocate for themselves.
  3. Donate
    You can support volunteer-run organizations by giving your time, money, or a special talent like photography or graphic design.
Feb22
Awareness

After a new student at their school in Berwick, Nova Scotia was harassed for sporting a pink shirt, two grade 12 students bought 50 pink shirts and inspired their peers to jump on board. To their astonishment, most of the students showed up wearing pink the day they went to hand out the shirts! Since then, Pink Shirt Day has grown across Canada and throughout the world. 

Bullying, cyberbullying, and harassment put a child’s mental, emotional, and physical health at danger and undermine their ability to learn. You or someone you know is probably a victim of bullying, as it affects one in five pupils. Contact a helping hand if you’re unsure of what to do. And keep in mind that compassion and kindness can go a long way. 

The key to eradicating bullying behaviour is education. How can you, as an educator, ensure your students have a safe space to seek guidance and support? Below is a list of questions to help you evaluate your current bullying prevention measures in your classroom environment. 

  1. Are the students’ behaviour expectations clear, consistent, and fair? 
  2. How do you handle the problem of kids and young people who are bystanders? 
  3. Is there a means for students to report bullying situations in an anonymous manner? 
  4. Do you have specified policies and procedures that are perfectly clear to assist adults in properly intervening with cases of disrespectful behaviour (bullying and harassment)? 
  5. Have you given staff members training that specifically covers assisting GSRD, disabled, or adolescents of varied ethnicities? 
  6. Do you discuss bullying and harassment in lectures, seminars, and gatherings while offering clearly understood, age-appropriate information?