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Media release: Organizers of the 2023 Universities Studying Slavery Conference Recognize Emancipation Day

Posted by Communications and Marketing on August 1, 2023 in News

August 1, 2023 (HALIFAX, N.S.) – The organizing committee of the 2023 Universities Studying Slavery (USS) Conference would like to acknowledge Emancipation Day. Today, August 1st marks the actual day in 1834 that the Slavery Abolition Act of 1833 came into effect across the British Empire. For the most part, the awareness of Slavery in Canada and Nova Scotia in particular was something that was not a well known part of our history. Emancipation Day is a recognition of this tragic past.

The transatlantic slave trade resulted in the deaths of millions of African people and their descendants. Many lost their lives as a result of this harsh treatment and through the journey across the Atlantic when they were transported as property or meaningless cargo. It is estimated that over two million African people around the world died during slave trade journeys. 

Once landed in North America, enslaved Africans and their descendants were forced to work in fields, complete manual labour and domestic work in homes. They were forced to change their names, abandon their faiths, reject their cultures, and stop speaking their native tongues; truly their identity and heritage was erased. The enslaved people were exposed to brutal forms of torture and abuse, all enforced by the law of the day. Emancipation Day is recognition of this past hurt that decades ago enslaved African Nova Scotians and countless other people of African descent in ways unimaginable. 

Join us this fall as we host the 2023 Universities Studying Slavery (USS) Conference. This groundbreaking event will feature keynotes by seven leaders from the spheres of politics, the arts and academia—each an internationally renowned voice on slavery and reparations. Taking place in Halifax, N.S., from Oct. 18–21, the conference will be hosted by Dalhousie University and the University of King’s College, working together and in partnership with the Black Cultural Centre for Nova Scotia. As the first gathering of the USS to be held outside the United States, the conference will explore the theme ‘Slavery, Reparations and Education: African Nova Scotia, Canada and Beyond.’ This extensive conference will explore in detail the effects of slavery and the fight for emancipation. 

Keynote Speakers:

Sir Hilary Beckles,
Dr. George Elliott Clarke
H.E. David Comissiong
Dr. Afua Cooper
Dr. Sylvia D. Hamilton
H.E. John Mahama
Dr. Harvey Amani Whitfield

Learn more about the conference and registration at: www.ussconference.ca

About Dalhousie University
Dalhousie University is Atlantic Canada’s leading research-intensive university, a key driver of the region’s intellectual, social and economic development for over 200 years. Located in the heart of Halifax—in the ancestral and unceded territory of the Mi’kmaq—with an Agricultural Campus in Truro/Bible Hill, Dalhousie is a truly national and international university, with more than half of our 20,000 students coming from outside of the province. Our 6,000 faculty and staff foster a diverse, purpose-driven community, one that spans 13 faculties and conducts more than $194 million in sponsored research annually.

About the University of King’s College
Established in 1789, King's College is Canada's oldest chartered university and is associated with Dalhousie University. A small and extraordinarily lively academic community located in Halifax (Kjipuktuk), Nova Scotia, King's is known nationally and internationally for its highly acclaimed interdisciplinary programs in the humanities, including its renowned Foundation Year Program, its professional programs in journalism and its fine arts programs in creative writing.

About The Black Cultural Centre for Nova Scotia
The Black Cultural Centre for Nova Scotia, established in 1983 as a provincial museum and community gathering place with a mandate to Protect, Preserve and Promote the rich history of one of Canada’s founding cultures. People of African descent have called Nova Scotia home since the 16th century and have made a significant impact as the birthplace of Black Culture and Heritage in Canada. The Centre features exhibits and artifact collection that shares this little known history, through programs, displays and outreach, both provincially and nationally.

For more information contact:

Shannon Bezanson, Event Manager/Co-owner, Event Partners Group
+001 902.448.0350 | shannon@eventpartnersgroup.com


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