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Tanya Talaga Vic 9T3 and Alia Hogben Receive Honorary Degrees

Tanya Talaga Vic 9T3 and Alia Hogben Receive Honorary Degrees

Two women who have empowered under-represented groups throughout their careers received honorary degrees from Victoria University. The degrees were conferred on journalist and award-winning author Tanya Talaga, who has reported extensively on Canada’s treatment of Indigenous people, and Alia Hogben, who, through her service as a social worker, teacher and advocate for Muslim women and children, is a celebrated champion for social justice. Chancellor Nick Saul, C.M., Vic 9T0, renowned food and social justice activist, conferred the degrees on May 12, 2022, as part of the Victoria University Convocation and Emmanuel College Graduation.

“Both Alia Hogben and Tanya Talaga represent the highest ideals of service and justice and reflect core values that we hold dear at Victoria University. Through their advocacy, previously silenced voices have been heard and celebrated. On behalf of our academic community, I express our deep appreciation for their work, and congratulate each of them on being awarded the degree of Doctor of Humane Letters,” said President William Robins.

For over 20 years, Alia Hogben focused on assisting abused women, children and vulnerable populations as a social worker and program supervisor at the Ontario Ministry of Social Services in Kingston. She also served her community by teaching locally at St. Lawrence College and writing a monthly column for The Kingston Whig Standard on Islam, Muslims and interfaith dialogue. She went on to serve as executive director for the Canadian Council of Muslim Women (CCMW) for over 15 years, advocating for the empowerment of Muslim women. She has presented to the Parliamentary Committee on Anti- Semitism and Human Rights, and a United Nations Forum on Anti-Muslim Discrimination as well as extensive international conferences. She was a contributing writer to Resilience and Triumph: Immigrant Women Tell Their Stories, edited by Rashmi Luther. She was appointed to the Order of Canada, received the Inter-Pares Peter Gillespie Award and the MAX (Muslim Awards for Excellence) Platinum Award.

As a journalist, first at the Toronto Star, and currently as a columnist at The Globe and Mail, Tanya Talaga sheds light on the realities Indigenous communities face, from youth suicide to a lack of clean water or access to high schools, and the ongoing, generational impacts of residential schools. Her multi-award-winning book Seven Fallen Feathers won the RBC Taylor Prize, the Shaughnessy Cohen Prize for Political Writing, and the First Nation Communities Read: Young Adult/Adult. It was a finalist for the Hilary Weston Writers’ Trust Nonfiction Prize, was recognized by the CBC as Nonfiction Book of the Year and was named a Top 100 Book by The Globe and Mail. Talaga was the first Ojibwe woman to deliver the CBC Massey Lectures which led to her second book, All Our Relations: Finding the Path Forward, in which she shares Indigenous stories from across Canada and the world. Talaga has also been a speaker for the Vic One plenaries.

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