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.

No Subscription Required

Religion on census needs a rework, group says

John Longhurst 5 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

Religion on census needs a rework, group says

John Longhurst 5 minute read Saturday, May. 30, 2026

Did you get the long form of the census? If you did, then you are among the 25 per cent of Canadians who had a chance to tell the government about your religious identity.

The federal government has been collecting information about religion in Canada since 1871; it’s one of the oldest efforts to track religion in the world.

Since that time, the religious landscape in Canada has changed a lot. Up until the 1960s, the country was mainly Christian, with small numbers of Jewish, Muslim, Hindu, Sikh and Buddhist Canadians.

The 2026 census lists over 200 religious groups, just over half of them Protestant and Catholic. The rest are from a wide variety of other religious traditions, including six streams of Buddhism, 10 different Jewish groups, seven kinds of Islam and five different forms of Indigenous spirituality. People can also choose from Wiccan, Satanist, Rastafarian and New Age groups, among others.

Read
Saturday, May. 30, 2026
No Subscription Required

New essay collection explores menace of far-right movements in Canada

Reviewed by Joseph Hnatiuk 4 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

New essay collection explores menace of far-right movements in Canada

Reviewed by Joseph Hnatiuk 4 minute read Saturday, May. 30, 2026

“Democracy is at stake and Canada is not immune to its demise,” states Miriam Edelson, editor of this timely anthology, warning that right-wing extremism, energized by memes and trolls permeating digital spaces, is heralding social and political change and affecting how current generations view the slow, often cumbersome democratic process.

Edelson’s well-researched observations are supported by 18 different contributors comprised of an array of like-minded academics, researchers and concerned activists who collectively alert readers to the extremist messaging that is altering some long-standing expectations of responsible governance.

Edelson’s social activism was honed by personal experiences while living in Toronto and working with the Canadian labour movement, spawning a literary legacy of personal essays and commentaries published by the Toronto Star, Globe & Mail and Literary Review. Her earlier book, My Journey with Jake: A Memoir of Parenting and Disability (2000) remains a poignant reminder that society functions best when individuals share a common purpose of looking out for one another.

In a concise foreword to Confronting the Resurgent Right, University of Manitoba professor and award- winning Free Press columnist Niigaan Sinclair similarly reminds readers that “far right movements built on hate,” like those earlier thrust upon Indigenous people and still targeting Jews, Muslims and other identifiable groups, inexorably lead to “racism, violence, and genocide.”

Read
Saturday, May. 30, 2026

Ruling against Aboriginal title on private land is allowed to stand by high court

Wolfgang Depner and Nono Shen, The Canadian Press 6 minute read Preview

Ruling against Aboriginal title on private land is allowed to stand by high court

Wolfgang Depner and Nono Shen, The Canadian Press 6 minute read Friday, May. 29, 2026

A New Brunswick ruling that Aboriginal title cannot be declared over private land has been allowed to stand by the Supreme Court of Canada, giving British Columbia an avenue to win its appeal in the landmark Cowichan Tribes case, B.C.'s attorney general said Thursday.

Niki Sharma said the high court's refusal to hear an appeal by the Wolastoqey First Nation in the case involving Aboriginal title in New Brunswick gives B.C. a "clear path" for an appeal in the Cowichan case, which has cast doubt on the primacy of private property rights.

"When it's the same legal issues that we are dealing with here, I think that bodes well for our arguments, and the appeals that we are seeking in B.C.," she said.

The mayor of Richmond, B.C., meanwhile said private property owners in the Cowichan Tribes title area should "breathe a little easier" in light of the Supreme Court of Canada's ruling.

Read
Friday, May. 29, 2026
No Subscription Required

The quiet power — and necessity — of Oseredok

Stephen Borys 6 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

The quiet power — and necessity — of Oseredok

Stephen Borys 6 minute read Thursday, May. 28, 2026

At a moment when Ukraine sits at the centre of global political attention, one of North America’s most important Ukrainian cultural institutions continues to operate quietly in Winnipeg’s Exchange District.

For many Winnipeggers, Oseredok remains one of the city’s hidden treasures — preserving an extraordinary collection of Ukrainian and Ukrainian-Canadian art, artifacts and archives within its five-storey building on Alexander Avenue.

Originally constructed in 1912 as the British and Foreign Bible Society Building and designed by Winnipeg architect William Bruce, the structure itself reflects layers of immigration, faith and history embedded within the city.

Yet few people fully understand its scale and significance.

Read
Thursday, May. 28, 2026

Hate crimes jump in Winnipeg in 2025

Chris Kitching 5 minute read Preview

Hate crimes jump in Winnipeg in 2025

Chris Kitching 5 minute read Wednesday, May. 27, 2026

The number of reported crimes that were classified as hate-motivated by the Winnipeg Police Service more than doubled in 2025, although the true number of incidents is thought to be higher.

Read
Wednesday, May. 27, 2026

Funding transit is Manitoba’s future

Mel Marginet 4 minute read Preview

Funding transit is Manitoba’s future

Mel Marginet 4 minute read Wednesday, May. 27, 2026

When it comes to making decisions about how to spend our tax dollars, Manitobans want governments to spend on programs and services that tackle as many priorities as possible.

Read
Wednesday, May. 27, 2026

Manitoba leads in protecting human rights

Thomas S. Axworthy 5 minute read Wednesday, May. 27, 2026

It 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

Gabrielle Piché 4 minute read Preview

Manitoba delinquency rate rises amid cost of living strain: Equifax

Gabrielle Piché 4 minute read Tuesday, May. 26, 2026

Manitobans are increasingly missing credit card payments as the cost of living rises.

Non-mortgage debt in Manitoba jumped 1.84 per cent, when comparing January through March to the same time last year. Manitobans’ average non-mortgage debt hung around $18,568.

Meanwhile, the measure tracking when Manitobans pass payment deadlines by at least 90 days — called a delinquency rate — hiked 2.32 per cent year-over-year, according to new data from credit reporting agency Equifax Canada.

“It’s not the worst province, by a long way,” said Rebecca Oakes, Equifax vice-president of advanced analytics. “But … (there’s) also a little bit more financial stress than some of the other provinces.”

Read
Tuesday, May. 26, 2026
No Subscription Required

Manitoba’s newspapers portrayed province as rife with untamed potential — to the detriment of the Indigenous community

Reviewed by Matt Henderson 5 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

Manitoba’s newspapers portrayed province as rife with untamed potential — to the detriment of the Indigenous community

Reviewed by Matt Henderson 5 minute read Saturday, May. 23, 2026

Historian Howard Zinn once compared the historian’s perspective to that of the mapmaker. We have the human tendency to see the world from our point of view, regardless of our best intentions and feigned attempts at objectivity.

Such is the same for newspapers, both historically and in their present form. Newspapers carry with them a certain perspective — a leaning of sorts that is inherent and molded in the perspective of owners, editorial boards and journalists themselves.

You can’t be neutral on a moving train, as Zinn would argue.

In the 19th century, however, newspapers notoriously and explicitly saw the world and tried to shape it from the perspective and agenda of its owners. George Brown’s Globe in Upper Canada, for example, was a classic example of a partisan media that used its platform to undermine rivals, the French and various governments.

Read
Saturday, May. 23, 2026

Outrage over Northland Tales program hypocritical

Niigaan Sinclair 5 minute read Preview

Outrage over Northland Tales program hypocritical

Niigaan Sinclair 5 minute read Friday, May. 22, 2026

Mud-slinging isn’t stopped by slinging more mud — and the concept behind the satirical TV show Northland Tales is an attempt to harmfully engage with a set of harmful beliefs and behaviours.

Read
Friday, May. 22, 2026
No Subscription Required

CRTC triples streamers’ financial contributions to Canadian content

Anja Karadeglija, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

CRTC triples streamers’ financial contributions to Canadian content

Anja Karadeglija, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Friday, May. 22, 2026

OTTAWA - Large TV streaming services like Netflix must contribute 15 per cent of their Canadian revenues to Canadian content, the federal broadcast regulator said Thursday.

That’s three times the five-per-cent initial contribution requirement the CRTC set out in 2024, which is being challenged in court by major streamers, including Apple and Amazon.

Contribution requirements for traditional broadcasters, which currently pay between 30 and 45 per cent, will be lowered to 25 per cent.

"The total contributions are expected to stabilize the funding at more than $2 billion in support of Canadian and Indigenous content, such as French-language content and news," the regulator said in a press release.

Read
Friday, May. 22, 2026

Is demographic collapse a good idea?

Gwynne Dyer 5 minute read Preview

Is demographic collapse a good idea?

Gwynne Dyer 5 minute read Thursday, May. 21, 2026

Smartphones seem to be directly linked to a worldwide crash in the birth rate.

It is “quite plausible that the modern digital media environment has had profound effects on society that have led to a decline in romantic coupling,” said Melissa Kearney, professor of economics at the University of Notre Dame.

She has to talk that way, being an academic, but what she means is that people are doomscrolling, not copulating.

That’s old news, but the evidence for it is more impressive because it is data-based. That’s what we have social scientists for, and John Burn-Murdoch, a columnist with the Financial Times, realized that you could quantify the data if you talk to enough of them. So he did, and learned that the big drop in the birth rate happened precisely when people got smartphones.

Read
Thursday, May. 21, 2026

Asian Heritage Month: more than a celebration

Fortunato Lim 4 minute read Thursday, May. 21, 2026

May 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

Maggie Macintosh 4 minute read Preview

Louis Riel division hires province’s first Indigenous woman superintendent

Maggie Macintosh 4 minute read Wednesday, May. 20, 2026

The new leader of the Louis Riel School Division is a Métis teacher who has — not unlike the founder of Manitoba — dedicated much of her life to supporting Indigenous families.

Jackie Connell has been named the incoming superintendent and chief executive officer of the St. Vital-based board office in charge of educating 17,000 students.

The board of trustees announced her historic appointment, which begins Aug. 4, late Tuesday.

“I feel Indigenous women are inherently built to lead. I don’t know that education systems always see or honour that leadership,” Connell said in an interview Wednesday.

Read
Wednesday, May. 20, 2026

Small businesses’ capacity to hire youth being constrained: CFIB survey

Ritika Dubey, The Canadian Press 3 minute read Preview

Small businesses’ capacity to hire youth being constrained: CFIB survey

Ritika Dubey, The Canadian Press 3 minute read Thursday, May. 21, 2026

TORONTO - A weaker economy and rising costs are leaving little room for small businesses to hire and train inexperienced youth, a new report suggests.

While small businesses remain the "training ground" for many young people entering the workforce, a survey by the Canadian Federation of Independent Business says small businesses are facing challenges from weak demand and rising payroll costs.

That's leaving many business owners with fewer resources to hire and train young workers.

"For many small businesses, taking a chance on someone with no experience, especially when training requires considerable time and effort, is simply not feasible in the current climate," the report said.

Read
Thursday, May. 21, 2026

Americans are looking back centuries to find Canadian ancestors — and citizenship

Nono Shen, The Canadian Press 10 minute read Preview

Americans are looking back centuries to find Canadian ancestors — and citizenship

Nono Shen, The Canadian Press 10 minute read Wednesday, May. 20, 2026

Cody Sibley was born and raised in Louisiana, but he always felt his family shared strong ties to Canada thanks to his Acadian ancestors from Nova Scotia.

Sibley said that as an eighth-generation descendant of Acadians, his family's roots could be traced back to "generation zero," Agathe Doucet, who was baptized on Jan. 19, 1710, in Nova Scotia.

He said Doucet married to Pierre Pitre in 1727, but the couple's lives were turned upside down in 1755 when British soldiers arrived at their doors and ordered their expulsion; like many Acadians, they ended up in Louisiana, where the community went on to become known as Cajuns.

Sibley is now among a surge of Americans combing through genealogical records in the hopes of finding a Canadian ancestor — some, like Sibley's, dating back hundreds of years, long before Canada officially existed. They plan to use the information to claim Canadian citizenship, under recently introduced legal changes that remove the so-called "first-generation limit" on citizenship for people born or adopted outside Canada to a Canadian citizen.

Read
Wednesday, May. 20, 2026
No Subscription Required

Solidarity Dialogues workshops counter polarization

Sharon Chisvin 5 minute read Saturday, May. 16, 2026

Amal 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.

$61-M investment in high-speed Internet planned for northern First Nations

Carol Sanders 4 minute read Preview

$61-M investment in high-speed Internet planned for northern First Nations

Carol Sanders 4 minute read Friday, May. 15, 2026

More homes on remote Manitoba First Nations will have access to high-speed Internet that most Canadians take for granted thanks to $61 million in new federal funding.

“Your communities have been living way too long without internet,” federal Northern and Arctic Affairs Minister Rebecca Chartrand told a gathering at Wasagamack Anisininew Nation Thursday. The MP for northern Manitoba said the four projects will deliver modern, reliable internet to 2,309 households.

“This really is a public safety issue and an equity issue,” Chartrand said in the community 600 kilometres north of Winnipeg that’s accessible by air, water and winter road.

“The lack of broadband has been a public safety failure. When families can’t call for help or nurses can’t access files or lives are at risk when you’re travelling roads without phone service, without internet,” she said.

Read
Friday, May. 15, 2026

AFN chief warns against changes to major projects development rules, calls for debate

Alessia Passafiume, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Preview

AFN chief warns against changes to major projects development rules, calls for debate

Alessia Passafiume, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Saturday, May. 16, 2026

OTTAWA - The national chief of the Assembly of First Nations says proposed changes to major project development rules are "not acceptable" and risk trampling on the rights of First Nations.

The federal government is proposing to grant authority to review interprovincial pipelines and transmission lines, and offshore renewable energy projects, to the Canada Energy Regulator instead of the Impact Assessment Agency of Canada.

The proposal, which will undergo a 30-day consultation process, would undo the move the Liberals made eight years ago to create the Impact Assessment Agency as a one-stop shop for all national project reviews.

National Chief Cindy Woodhouse Nepinak told The Canadian Press the proposed changes "demonstrate a pattern of exclusion" and she rejects the compressed timeline to submit feedback.

Read
Saturday, May. 16, 2026

Indigenous hoopster’s son on mission to get dad inducted into Canadian Basketball Hall of Fame

Joshua Frey-Sam 8 minute read Preview

Indigenous hoopster’s son on mission to get dad inducted into Canadian Basketball Hall of Fame

Joshua Frey-Sam 8 minute read Thursday, May. 14, 2026

Terry Garrow already received his flowers. Now he’s on a mission to make sure his late father gets his.

By his estimation, his father has been overlooked for far too long when it comes to recognizing the most influential players, fearless leaders and forward-thinking builders who have helped shape Canadian basketball.

He understands that his pleas come from a point of bias, but that doesn’t change the facts in his mind: Alex Garrow deserves to be in the Canadian Basketball Hall of Fame.

Not for the success he experienced during a short career in the early 1960s, but for his resilience as a trailblazer during a time in which Indigenous athletes were largely an afterthought. And how fitting it would be for Alex to be the first Indigenous player immortalized.

Read
Thursday, May. 14, 2026

Parents irked after school ditches Mother’s Day

Maggie Macintosh 4 minute read Preview

Parents irked after school ditches Mother’s Day

Maggie Macintosh 4 minute read Wednesday, May. 6, 2026

Winnipeg families are decrying an elementary school’s decision to rebrand an annual tradition — making macaroni necklaces and other crafts for Mother’s Day — in the name of inclusion.

Grade 1 and 2 teachers at Sage Creek School informed parents this week that their children will bring home “family gifts” later this spring.

Instead of making items specifically for Mother’s Day or Father’s Day, student-made creations will be distributed on May 15, the International Day of Families.

“Where is the line? What is next? At what point are you being more exclusive than inclusive?” said Ashley Dolphin, a mother of two, including a Grade 1 student at the kindergarten-to-Grade 8 school.

Read
Wednesday, May. 6, 2026
No Subscription Required

Antisemitism on the rise, becoming normalized, B’nai Brith warns

John Longhurst 3 minute read Preview
No Subscription Required

Antisemitism on the rise, becoming normalized, B’nai Brith warns

John Longhurst 3 minute read Monday, Apr. 27, 2026

Canada is in the throes of a national antisemitism crisis, says B’nai Brith Canada.

The organization’s annual audit of antisemitic incidents reports 6,800 in 2025, 6,248 of which involved online hate.

That is a 9.3 per cent increase over 2024, when the total was 6,219, and it represents the highest total since 1995, said B’nai Brith, the country’s oldest human rights organization dedicated to eradicating racism, antisemitism and hatred.

The biggest spike in antisemitism occurred in 2023, when the number of incidents rose from 2,769 in 2022 to 5,791 following the Oct. 7 Hamas attack on Israel.

Read
Monday, Apr. 27, 2026

Report on state of rural Manitoba’s economy ‘exciting work’

Gabrielle Piché 4 minute read Preview

Report on state of rural Manitoba’s economy ‘exciting work’

Gabrielle Piché 4 minute read Tuesday, Apr. 21, 2026

Declining municipal populations and workforce-bound immigrants are highlighted in a first-of-its-kind report detailing Manitoba’s rural communities.

Read
Tuesday, Apr. 21, 2026

First Nations say Eby backs down again, now seeks joint path on B.C. Indigenous law

Alessia Passafiume and Wolfgang Depner, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Preview

First Nations say Eby backs down again, now seeks joint path on B.C. Indigenous law

Alessia Passafiume and Wolfgang Depner, The Canadian Press 4 minute read Thursday, May. 7, 2026

VICTORIA - British Columbia Premier David Eby has backed down again on the pausing of key parts of the Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples Act, scrapping plans to table a suspension bill this legislative session.

The premier’s office says in a brief statement that it "can confirm that the government will not be introducing legislation on DRIPA during this session."

Instead, it says Eby will hold a press conference Monday to outline next steps.

A draft document provided by a First Nations source says the government now hopes to work with First Nations to come up with a joint approach to DRIPA, under a framework for negotiations.

Read
Thursday, May. 7, 2026