Hope Meets Action: Echoes Through the Black Continuum is the title of a new pocket gallery exhibit at the Royal sa国际传媒 Museum that centres on the Black experience in sa国际传媒 and tells their story 鈥 unfiltered.
The exhibit, which opened on Saturday, was created by the sa国际传媒 Black History Awareness Society in partnership with the museum.
The exhibition differs from others in the museum because it represents the telling of history through Black eyes and experiences 鈥 and not whitewashed by the annals of colonial history.
鈥淭his is our story being told by Black voices,鈥 said Silvia Mangue Alene, president of the sa国际传媒 Black History Awareness Society.
She said that the exhibition not only looks to the past but also reflects the ongoing sense of belonging felt by contemporary Blacks in sa国际传媒 today.
鈥淭he work here is fantastic and we hope that other cultures will have the opportunity to have their stories told in the future,鈥 said Alene.
The exhibition includes seldom-told stories of Black women such as Sylvia Stark, who was born an enslaved person in Missouri, who taught herself to read by secretly listening to her master鈥檚 children鈥檚 lessons.
She eventually became a pillar of the Black pioneer community on Salt Spring Island where her daughter would later become the first Black teacher on Vancouver Island.
鈥淭he exhibition represents a shift in the narrative 鈥 to one where the story is not filtered by the museum,鈥 said Chris O鈥機onnor, learning program developer for the Royal sa国际传媒 Museum. 鈥淎s the exhibit centers on the Black experience, we felt that it was not our story to tell. It is a vehicle for expression 鈥 for the voice of the community to be heard. Our role is to support their vision, to work alongside them and be part of the process.鈥
Josh Robertson, the program鈥檚 writer and curator and Rodney Hazard, the designer, are both Black.
The exhibit addresses the historical erasure of the contributions of Blacks in the province.
鈥淩ight now, many British Columbians are re-examining the province鈥檚 history and challenging its longstanding bias toward European settler history,鈥 said Dr. Daniel Muzyka, acting CEO, Royal sa国际传媒 Museum. 鈥淲e鈥檙e indebted to the sa国际传媒 Black History Awareness Society for leading the way on this long-overdue retelling of Black history in sa国际传媒鈥
The Pocket Gallery exhibition is free to the public during regular museum hours. It is located in the Clifford Carl Hall on the main floor of the museum. It runs until March 1, 2022.
For more information, go to .