Skip to content
Completing the Story

Completing the Story

Working to increase and improve the representation of women in public spaces.

  • About Completing The Story
  • News/Blog
  • Your Community
  • Contact

Montreal: Students Are Calling Out McGill For Not Removing The Statue Of Its Slave-Owning Founder

Posted on August 5, 2020August 5, 2020 by completingthestory

How about renaming the university after a Black or Indigenous woman?

Students Are Calling Out McGill For Not Removing The Statue Of Its Slave-Owning Founder

https://www.mtlblog.com/news/canada/qc/montreal/students-are-calling-out-mcgill-for-not-removing-the-statue-of-its-slaveowning-founder

Tags: black lives matter, canada, montreal

Post navigation

Previous:The Untold Story of the Black Women Fighting to Remove Racist Statues
Next:Kentucky Capitol’s first statue of woman will finally be unveiled in 2021

Please follow & like us :)

RSS
Facebook
Facebook
fb-share-icon
Twitter
Visit Us
Follow Me
Tweet
Instagram

Highlights

  • Anne Frank Statue Installed in Edmonton
  • Edmonton City Council votes unanimously to remove Grandin name from LRT station
  • Edmonton elected its first female councillor 100 years ago. A new project examines why so few have followed in her footsteps
  • Petition aims to rename Edmonton street after local boxing star Jelena Mrdjenovich
  • Black Canadians celebrate Emancipation Day with four historical designations
  • Building a better future from the debris of racist monuments
  • Edmonton: Article in Canadian Jewish Record about Shukhevych Monument
  • Interview on CityTV about Nazi Monument in Edmonton
  • Speaking Out Against Monuments to Nazis Collaborators in Edmonton
  • Edmonton’s Most Problematic and Racist Place Names

Recent Posts

  • Massachusetts: Statue honours once-enslaved woman who won freedom in court
  • Bristol-based anonymous artist to create more women statues
  • Statue of Black Educator Replaces Confederate General in U.S. Capitol
  • New research reveals that just 2% of named public statues in Britain commemorate people of colour
  • After two decades, the Amelia Earhart statue is finally coming to the U.S. Capitol

Archives

Back to Top