The Afro-Métis Anthem
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MEDIA

Afro-Métis Anthem and Catalysts in the NEWS 

Chris White
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Chris White will be joining me this morning on Songs for the Revolution CKCU 93.1FM 8am, to talk about a new Afro Métis album he’s crowdfunding as part of the Anthem Project. 
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Linda Carvery
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Singer Linda Carvery revisits her life growing up in north-end Halifax

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Linda Carvery
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Celebrate the spirit of the holidays with us at Holiday Magic—a festive event in support of Dartmouth General Hospital’s innovative dialysis unit - featuring Linda Carvery
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George Elliott Clarke
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D.D. Jackson and George Elliott Clarke's new project prompts the question: Can any poem be turned into music?
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George Elliott Clarke
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Chris White
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 'Singing For Viola' - written by Chris White.  The video was created by Thunder Bay-based videographer Chad Kirvan at a hair salon in Ottawa -- an appropriate location given Viola's business activities. The Afro-Métis Nation recorded the song on the 'Constitution' album.
Sheila White
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Honouring Portia White
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Sheila White
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Sheila White's 3 1/2 minute speech July 9, 2022  in Truro, NS to the gathering where the Prime Minister and the Minister of Defence apologized to the descendants of
servicemen of the segregated, No. 2 Construction Battalion on behalf of the Government of Canada for systemic Anti-Black racism during the First World War. I am
a paternal granddaughter of Rev. Capt. Wm. Andrew White, DD. b. 1874 d. 1936, a person of federally recognized historical significance in Canada, for his role as Chaplain, Honourary Captain, and Black community leader.

 With Gratitude: FUNDERS 

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Toronto Arts Council (TAC) is the City of Toronto’s funding body for artists and arts organizations. Since 1974, TAC has offered innovative and responsive programs, enabling artists and arts organizations to explore, create and thrive. With funding of over $25 million annually, TAC grants lead to exhibitions, performances, readings and workshops seen each year by over 5 million people across the city. TAC is proud to play a leadership role in fostering Toronto’s dynamic and diverse arts scene.

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 With Gratitude: SPONSORS

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Afro-Métis
AFRO-METIS Brand Creator

www.Aumocla.net

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rZilient Inc
Lived Xperience Marketers

www.rZilient.com

MEDIA
Afro-Métis Anthem and Catalysts in the NEWS 


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Linda Carvery
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George Elliott Clarke
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Sheila White


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 George Elliott Clarke
Sheila White

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Sheila White
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Chris White
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LAND ACKNOWLEDGEMENT

We wish to acknowledge this land on which the ANTHEM campaign exists in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.  For thousands of years it has been the traditional land of the Huron-Wendat, the Seneca, and the Mississaugas of the Credit. Today, this meeting place is still the home to many Indigenous people from across Turtle Island and we are grateful to have the opportunity to work on this land.”​

Now, we “Africadians” include multiple African diasporas as well as mixed-race progeny, whose DNA is both cosmopolitan and truly indigenous—due to Cherokee and/or Mi’kmaw admixture, thus creating the “Afro-Métis.”

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“Indigenous Blacks”—or “Africadians”—or “African-Nova Scotians” have resided in Nova Scotia—originally (and still) Mi’kma’ki—for over 400 years, since 1605. First brought as enslaved people to Louisbourg, Cape Breton (1713-1760), then as enslaved “Planters” to Halifax and the mainland (1749-1760), their ancestors were also anti-slavery Black Loyalists (1783), Maroons (1796-1800), War of 1812 Black Refugees (1812-1816), and free workers and miners in industrial Cape Breton (early 20th Century).Hailing historically from colonial New England and Dixie, then Jamaica, and then the British West Indies, this polyglot and multicultural Black people are a distinct North Atlantic offshoot of the African Diaspora.
 
Their landed presence connects Nova Scotia to pre-and-post-revolutionary United States, Bermuda (via the Royal Navy), Jamaica (via the Maroons), Sierra Leone (via Black Loyalists and Maroons), and the British West Indies (especially Jamaica, Barbados, and Trinidad), and to the United Kingdom.
 
A resilient people, the African-Nova Scotians—despite slavery, racism, and segregation—built 52 communities, all anchored by a self-instituted church, all about Mi’kma’ki, but on the worst possible land provided by racist governments. Still, this land-base allowed a powerful culture, specific form of English, and spirited faiths to take root and thrive. \

They have astonished the globe as acclaimed athletes, singers, musicians, artists, warriors, scholars, and preachers.Now, we “Africadians” include multiple African diasporas as well as mixed-race progeny, whose DNA is both cosmopolitan and truly indigenous—due to Cherokee and/or Mi’kmaw admixture, thus creating the “Afro-Métis.”

Web Design: RZilient Inc.

  • ANTHEM
  • Our MUSIC is YOURS!
  • CATALYSTS [US!]
  • Afro-Métis Story
  • Your VIEWS
  • Media
  • Contact
  • DONATE