The McGill Tribune Vol. 40 Issue 18

Page 1

The McGill Tribune TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 16 2021 | VOL. #40 | ISSUE #18

McGILLTRIBUNE.COM | @McGILLTRIBUNE

Published by the SPT, a student society of McGill University

EDITORIAL

FEATURE

Academic freedom does not justify discrimination

Hooked on the craft

STUDENT LIFE The history of Black History Month

PGs. 8-9

PG. 5

PG. 10

(Defne Gurcay / The McGill Tribune)

A walk a day keeps the doctor away

PG. 13

Mcsway’s Heartbreak Museum offers students a cathartic space to express hurt The online exhibition featured poems, short prose, and visual art Erika MacKenzie Staff Writer For those who are single, have recently ended a relationship, or are simply not interested in romance, Valentine’s Day can often feel like a punch in the

gut. With the additional isolation of the COVID-19 pandemic, this year’s solitude hits especially hard. Enter the Heartbreak Museum, an annual exhibition hosted by Mcsway Poetry Collective. The Heartbreak Museum provides a digital space for artists and poets to share their heartache—romantic,

platonic, or otherwise—authentically. This year’s edition was held virtually through a website and Zoom open mic. Event organizer Zeina Jhaish, U3 Education, spoke with The McGill Tribune about the impetus for this event. PG. 4

‘Black Mental Health Matters’ unpacks Student organizations collaborate on systemic racism in healthcare SSMU ‘Divest for Human Rights’ motion The presentation discussed mental health topics in the Black community Lucy Keller Staff Writer The Office of the Provost and Vice-Principal (Academic), the Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences, and the McGill initiative Supporting Young Black Students (SYBS) hosted “Black Mental Health Matters,” held virtually on Feb. 10. As part

of McGill’s Black History Month 2021, the event consisted of a presentation on mental health, a panel discussion, and a conversation centered around mental health in the Black community. The presentation was given by Maureen Owino, who resides in Toronto, but joined the Zoom event from Nairobi. Owino is

a first generation immigrant who is currently a PhD student at York University studying the impact of the HIV/AIDS and COVID-19 pandemics on Black communities in Canada. Owino is also a program coordinator for the Committee for Accessible AIDS Treatment in Toronto. PG. 10

The policy will be presented at the Feb. 16 SSMU General Assembly Ella Fitzhugh Staff Writer Seven McGill student organizations have collectively drafted a motion titled the “Divest for Human Rights Policy” to advance at the upcoming Students’ Society of McGill University (SSMU) General Assembly (GA) on Feb. 16. Divest McGill, Climate Justice Action McGill, Students in

Solidarity for Palestinian Human Rights (SPHR), Students for a Free Tibet, McGill Stands with Hong Kong, Indigenous Student Alliance, and Students for Peace and Disarmament (SPD), collaborated to develop the policy which demands that McGill divest from companies that either aid or are complicit in human rights violations and environmental destruction.

With each group addressing different areas of McGill’s investment portfolio, the policy targets corporations and institutions complicit in a variety of human right abuses, such as Canada’s militarization of Wet’suwet’en territory, China’s forced labor camps for Uyghurs, and the statesanctioned crimes against Palestinians. PG. 4


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.