Members of Parliament in the House of Commons voted unanimously Wednesday to designate August 1 as Emancipation Day across Canada.
The date marks the anniversary of when Britain’s Parliament abolished slavery in the British Empire on August 1, 1834.
Liberal MP for Richmond Hill, Majid Jowhari, introduced the motion:
That the House recognize that: (a) the British Parliament abolished slavery in the British Empire as of August 1, 1834; (b) slavery existed in British North America prior to its abolition in 1834; (c) abolitionists and others who struggled against slavery, including those who arrived in Upper and Lower Canada by the Underground Railroad, have historically celebrated August 1 as Emancipation Day; (d) the Government of Canada announced on January 30, 2018, that it would officially recognize the United Nations International Decade for People of African Descent to highlight the important contributions that people of African descent have made to Canadian society, and to provide a platform for confronting anti-Black racism; and (e) the heritage of Canada’s people of African descent and the contributions they have made and continue to make to Canada; and that, in the opinion of the House, the government should designate August 1 of every year as “Emancipation Day” in Canada.
Green Party Leader Annamie Paul said, “For almost 200 years, Emancipation Day has gone generally uncommemorated, and untaught, though people of African descent have lived in Canada since the transatlantic slave trade and the Indigenous Peoples of these territories predate the colonialists.”
Read more in the CBC report and in the National Post.
