Diversity and pluralism in Canada
Please review each article prior to use: grade-level applicability and curricular alignment might not be obvious from the headline alone.
Religion on census needs a rework, group says
5 minute read Preview Saturday, May. 30, 2026New essay collection explores menace of far-right movements in Canada
4 minute read Preview Saturday, May. 30, 2026Ruling against Aboriginal title on private land is allowed to stand by high court
6 minute read Preview Friday, May. 29, 2026The quiet power — and necessity — of Oseredok
6 minute read Preview Thursday, May. 28, 2026Hate crimes jump in Winnipeg in 2025
5 minute read Preview Wednesday, May. 27, 2026Funding transit is Manitoba’s future
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, May. 27, 2026Manitoba leads in protecting human rights
5 minute read Wednesday, May. 27, 2026It is perhaps little noticed in our province — as we grapple with the cost of living, homelessness and the impending threat of forest fires — that the NDP government of Premier Wab Kinew has emerged as a leading defender of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, even as the governments of Quebec, Alberta and Saskatchewan are doing their best to weaken it.
Issues of human rights and the role of the Charter were at the forefront of a recent four-day hearing before the Supreme Court of Canada on the legality of Quebec’s secularism law, Bill 21.
The law prohibits public sector employees — including teachers, police officers and government lawyers — from wearing religious symbols such as turbans, crosses, hijabs and yarmulkes while at work. Bill 21 forces religiously observant individuals to choose between their faith and employment in public institutions.
It is a clear violation of Section 2 of the Charter, which guarantees freedom of conscience, religion and association.
Manitoba delinquency rate rises amid cost of living strain: Equifax
4 minute read Preview Tuesday, May. 26, 2026Manitoba’s newspapers portrayed province as rife with untamed potential — to the detriment of the Indigenous community
5 minute read Preview Saturday, May. 23, 2026Outrage over Northland Tales program hypocritical
5 minute read Preview Friday, May. 22, 2026CRTC triples streamers’ financial contributions to Canadian content
4 minute read Preview Friday, May. 22, 2026Is demographic collapse a good idea?
5 minute read Preview Thursday, May. 21, 2026Asian Heritage Month: more than a celebration
4 minute read Thursday, May. 21, 2026May is Asian Heritage Month in Canada. In Manitoba, it is a time to honour the many Asian communities who have shaped this province through culture, labour, leadership, family, food, faith, art, advocacy and public service. Celebration matters. But so do the stories that give celebration its sweetness.
Asian Canadian history is made of many threads.
We remember Chinese labourers who helped build the Canadian Pacific Railway while later facing the Chinese Head Tax and the Chinese Exclusion Act.
We remember the South Asian passengers of the Komagata Maru, denied entry by immigration rules designed to exclude them.
Louis Riel division hires province’s first Indigenous woman superintendent
4 minute read Preview Wednesday, May. 20, 2026Small businesses’ capacity to hire youth being constrained: CFIB survey
3 minute read Preview Thursday, May. 21, 2026Americans are looking back centuries to find Canadian ancestors — and citizenship
10 minute read Preview Wednesday, May. 20, 2026Solidarity Dialogues workshops counter polarization
5 minute read Saturday, May. 16, 2026Amal Elsana Alhjooj is not a person to sit idly by when she encounters a challenge, conflict or situation that needs correcting. Over the years, that attitude and activism have led her to establish several innovative social justice and civil society initiatives that, among other achievements, have enhanced the livelihood and independence of Bedouin women in Israel, where Alhjooj was raised, and the relationship between Jews and Arabs both in Israel, Palestine and in Canada, where Alhjooj now lives.
Alhjooj’s most recent venture is a series of workshops called Solidarity Dialogues.
Solidarity Dialogues is an offshoot of PLEDJ, a social change non-profit that Alhjooj, who is Muslim, co-established in 2021 with Brian Bronfman, the Jewish president of the Peace Network for Social Harmony, to empower and organize marginalized communities to address systematic injustices that impede their lives.
Solidarity Dialogues is more narrow in scope, as it is designed specifically to address the deep seated polarization currently permeating Canadian workplaces, schools and society in general. Solidarity Dialogues’ series of workshops provide participants with the tools to navigate that polarization and the heated, intolerant and uncomfortable exchanges that tend to characterize that polarization. By differentiating between dialogue and debate, and hurt and harm, the workshops provide participants with safe spaces in which to step out of their comfort zones, listen empathetically and openly to others’ lived experiences, and develop mutual understanding and an ability to respond to conflict.