Tag: CBC

  • Clement Virgo\’s Brother, sci-fi comedy Viking among leading nominees for Canadian Screen Awards | CBC News

    [

    Clement Virgo\’s Brother, a coming of age drama set in Scarborough, Ont., in the 1990s, leads all films with 14 nominations at the Canadian Screen Awards, followed by Stephane Lafleur\’s science-fiction comedy Viking, which picked up 13 nods on Wednesday when the Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television announced its contenders for this year\’s awards. 

    On the broadcast side, the CBC and BET+ series The Porter picked up 19 nominations, while last year\’s most nominated show, Sort Of, had another strong showing with 15, the same as the CBC Gem series Detention Adventure

    Brother, which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival last September, is an adaptation of David Chariandy\’s novel of the same name, while Viking is about a B-team of volunteers tasked with simulating a manned mission to Mars, in order to work out the social issues that the real astronauts will face. 

    David Cronenberg\’s science-fiction body horror Crimes Of The Future received 11 nominations. 

    This is the first year that the awards will feature gender neutral performance categories, with eight nominees in each category, including Lamar Johnson (Brother), Steve Laplante (Viking) and Seung-Yoon Choi (Riceboy Sleeps)

    \"A
    Mouna Traoré as Marlene and Aml Ameen as Junior in The Porter. Both were nominated for best lead performer in a drama series, along with their co-star Ronnie Rowe Jr. (CBC)

    The CTV series Transplant, last year\’s winner for best drama series, is again nominated in that category, alongside CBC\’s The Porter, Moonshine and SkyMed. Global\’s Departure rounds out the nominees. 

    The best comedy series category also sees a returning champion among its nominees in CBC\’s Sort Of. Also nominated are Crave\’s Letterkenny, CTV-Sci-Fi\’s Astrid & Lilly Save the World, CBC Gem\’s Fakes and CTV\’s Children Ruin Everything.

    This will be the 11th edition of the awards, which celebrate achievement in Canadian broadcasting and film. They will be broadcast on Sunday, April 16 on CBC and CBC Gem, in a pre-taped format that some actors have expressed concerns about. This year\’s nominees include:

    \"A
    Bilal Baig, star and co-creator of Sort Of, which was again nominated for best comedy series, which it won at last year’s CSAs. (CBC)

    Best Motion Picture

    • Babysitter.

    • Brother.

    • Falcon Lake. 

    • Riceboy Sleeps. 

    • Summer with Hope. 

    • Viking. 

    Achievement in Direction 

    • Clement Virgo – Brother.

    • David Cronenberg – Crimes of the Future.

    • Charlotte Le Bon – Falcon Lake.

    • Anthony Shim – Riceboy Sleeps.

    • Stéphane Lafleur – Viking.

    Performance in a Leading Role 

    • Monia Chokri – Babysitter.

    • Lamar Johnson – Brother.

    • Joseph Engel – Falcon Lake.

    • Kelly Depeault – Noémie dit oui.

    • Seung-Yoon Choi – Riceboy Sleeps.

    • Maxime Le Flaguais – Rodéo.

    • Larissa Corriveau – That Kind of Summer | Un été comme ça.

    • Steve Laplante – Viking.

    Ted Rogers Best Feature Length Documentary 

    Best Drama Series

    • Departure.

    • Moonshine.

    • The Porter.

    • SkyMed.

    • Transplant.

    Best Comedy Series

    WATCH | CSAs switch to gender-neutral performance categories:

    \"\"

    Gender-neutral categories coming to Canadian Screen Awards

    The Canadian Screen Awards will be switching to gender-neutral performance categories in 2023 rather than having separate prizes for best actor and actress. Organizers say it\’s an effort toward making the industry more equitable.

    Best Lead Performer, Drama Series

    • Mayko Nguyen – Hudson & Rex.

    • John Reardon – Hudson & Rex.

    • Jennifer Finnigan – Moonshine.

    • Aml Ameen – The Porter.

    • Ronnie Rowe Jr. – The Porter.

    • Mouna Traoré – The Porter.

    • Hamza Haq –Transplant.

    • Laurence Leboeuf –Transplant.

    Best Lead Performer, Comedy

    • Meaghan Rath – Children Ruin Everything.

    • Meredith MacNeill – Pretty Hard Cases.

    • Adrienne C. Moore – Pretty Hard Cases.

    • Rakhee Morzaria – Run the Burbs.

    • Andrew Phung – Run the Burbs.

    • Bilal Baig – Sort Of.

    • Dani Kind – Workin\’ Moms.

    • Catherine Reitman – Workin\’ Moms.



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  • Clement Virgo\’s Brother, sci-fi comedy Viking among leading nominees for Canadian Screen Awards | CBC News

    [

    Clement Virgo\’s Brother, a coming of age drama set in Scarborough, Ont., in the 1990s, leads all films with 14 nominations at the Canadian Screen Awards, followed by Stephane Lafleur\’s science-fiction comedy Viking, which picked up 13 nods on Wednesday when the Academy of Canadian Cinema & Television announced its contenders for this year\’s awards. 

    On the broadcast side, the CBC and BET+ series The Porter picked up 19 nominations, while last year\’s most nominated show, Sort Of, had another strong showing with 15, the same as the CBC Gem series Detention Adventure

    Brother, which premiered at the Toronto International Film Festival last September, is an adaptation of David Chariandy\’s novel of the same name, while Viking is about a B-team of volunteers tasked with simulating a manned mission to Mars, in order to work out the social issues that the real astronauts will face. 

    David Cronenberg\’s science-fiction body horror Crimes Of The Future received 11 nominations. 

    This is the first year that the awards will feature gender neutral performance categories, with eight nominees in each category, including Lamar Johnson (Brother), Steve Laplante (Viking) and Seung-Yoon Choi (Riceboy Sleeps)

    \"A
    Mouna Traoré as Marlene and Aml Ameen as Junior in The Porter. Both were nominated for best lead performer in a drama series, along with their co-star Ronnie Rowe Jr. (CBC)

    The CTV series Transplant, last year\’s winner for best drama series, is again nominated in that category, alongside CBC\’s The Porter, Moonshine and SkyMed. Global\’s Departure rounds out the nominees. 

    The best comedy series category also sees a returning champion among its nominees in CBC\’s Sort Of. Also nominated are Crave\’s Letterkenny, CTV-Sci-Fi\’s Astrid & Lilly Save the World, CBC Gem\’s Fakes and CTV\’s Children Ruin Everything.

    This will be the 11th edition of the awards, which celebrate achievement in Canadian broadcasting and film. They will be broadcast on Sunday, April 16 on CBC and CBC Gem, in a pre-taped format that some actors have expressed concerns about. This year\’s nominees include:

    \"A
    Bilal Baig, star and co-creator of Sort Of, which was again nominated for best comedy series, which it won at last year’s CSAs. (CBC)

    Best Motion Picture

    • Babysitter.

    • Brother.

    • Falcon Lake. 

    • Riceboy Sleeps. 

    • Summer with Hope. 

    • Viking. 

    Achievement in Direction 

    • Clement Virgo – Brother.

    • David Cronenberg – Crimes of the Future.

    • Charlotte Le Bon – Falcon Lake.

    • Anthony Shim – Riceboy Sleeps.

    • Stéphane Lafleur – Viking.

    Performance in a Leading Role 

    • Monia Chokri – Babysitter.

    • Lamar Johnson – Brother.

    • Joseph Engel – Falcon Lake.

    • Kelly Depeault – Noémie dit oui.

    • Seung-Yoon Choi – Riceboy Sleeps.

    • Maxime Le Flaguais – Rodéo.

    • Larissa Corriveau – That Kind of Summer | Un été comme ça.

    • Steve Laplante – Viking.

    Ted Rogers Best Feature Length Documentary 

    Best Drama Series

    • Departure.

    • Moonshine.

    • The Porter.

    • SkyMed.

    • Transplant.

    Best Comedy Series

    WATCH | CSAs switch to gender-neutral performance categories:

    \"\"

    Gender-neutral categories coming to Canadian Screen Awards

    The Canadian Screen Awards will be switching to gender-neutral performance categories in 2023 rather than having separate prizes for best actor and actress. Organizers say it\’s an effort toward making the industry more equitable.

    Best Lead Performer, Drama Series

    • Mayko Nguyen – Hudson & Rex.

    • John Reardon – Hudson & Rex.

    • Jennifer Finnigan – Moonshine.

    • Aml Ameen – The Porter.

    • Ronnie Rowe Jr. – The Porter.

    • Mouna Traoré – The Porter.

    • Hamza Haq –Transplant.

    • Laurence Leboeuf –Transplant.

    Best Lead Performer, Comedy

    • Meaghan Rath – Children Ruin Everything.

    • Meredith MacNeill – Pretty Hard Cases.

    • Adrienne C. Moore – Pretty Hard Cases.

    • Rakhee Morzaria – Run the Burbs.

    • Andrew Phung – Run the Burbs.

    • Bilal Baig – Sort Of.

    • Dani Kind – Workin\’ Moms.

    • Catherine Reitman – Workin\’ Moms.



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  • Quebec launches hearings into allegations of \’horrific\’ abuse in major junior hockey | CBC News

    [

    WARNING: This article contains graphic content and may affect those who have experienced sexual violence or know someone affected by it.

    The Quebec National Assembly will begin hearings today into allegations of violence and hazing in the world of major junior hockey.

    This comes after claimants tried to launch a class-action suit against the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League (QMJHL), and other leagues and teams, saying they were responsible for a \”toxic culture\” and a \”culture of silence\” that hides predatory violence, hazing, bullying, harassment, and assaults.

    On Feb. 3 Ontario Superior Court Justice Paul Perrell refused to certify a class-action launched in 2020 with two former junior league players as lead plaintiffs: Daniel Carcillo and Garrett Taylor.

    A third plaintiff, Stephen Quirk, who is a former QMJHL player, later joined Carcillo and Taylor in the lawsuit.

    The suit covered events in the QMJHL, the Western Hockey League and the Ontario Hockey League, going back to May 8, 1975 — the date the Canadian Hockey League was founded.

    Justice Perrell described the evidence from Quirk, Carcillo and Taylor and other former players who submitted written statements as \”horrific.\”

    Judge calls plaintiffs \’genuine heroes\’

    Carcillo, Taylor, and Quirk had claims against five hockey teams — the Lethbridge Hurricanes, the Prince Albert Raiders, the Sarnia Sting, the Moncton Wildcats and the Halifax Mooseheads.

    The Halifax and Moncton teams belong to the QMJHL, which in addition to its teams in Quebec, operates six teams in the Maritimes.

    Perrell described the three men as part of a group of elite athletes who left their families and hometowns to join teams with the hope of improving their skills.

    Although the judge called the former players \”genuine heroes\” he said they failed to provide a \”workable litigation plan,\” and for that reason denied their request to certify a class-action lawsuit.

    He said it was not conceivable that a singular class-action would deal with the \”evil that has persisted for half a century in amateur hockey.\”

    \"A
    The director of communications and head of diversity and inclusion at the QMJHL, said the league wants to reassure parents that their children will be safe. (Peter Evans/CBC)

    \’I do not want any other child to go through what I did\’

    As part of the decision, Perrell included the testimony of six unnamed former hockey players all of whom described months of abuse they endured as rookies on various teams.

    A former hockey player identified as \”AA\” said the general manager of his hockey team told him not to be a \”pussy\” when the hazing got bad. He recalled getting jumped by veteran players in the locker room.

    A player identified as \”FF\” said the coaches did not intervene.

    \”This happened in the showers, on the bus, or elsewhere. The coaches and team staff saw and knew,\” said FF, adding that after he was traded, he experienced the same type of hazing.

    \”My time in major junior hockey has left me mentally scarred. I\’ve lived with it my whole life […], but I cannot keep it secret anymore. I live with anxiety every day. I used to have nightmares, which I rarely have any more, but my anxiety is always there …. My story has been extremely difficult but am telling it because I do not want any other child to go through what I did.\”

    Legault asked QMJHL \’to explain themselves\’

    Last week, Premier François Legault said the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League could not remain silent. He called the abuse detailed by the judge \”very serious.\”

    \"Quebec
    Quebec Premier François Legault was at a news conference, earlier this month at the legislature in Quebec City. Legault called on the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League to provide a public explanation. (Jacques Boissinot/The Canadian Press)

    Isabelle Charest, the provincial minister responsible for sports, said reports of the abuse had left her speechless.

    Charest said the independent complaints officer\’s mandate is to handle situations such as this one and noted that all sports federations must have a policy of integrity in place that ensures the environment is \”free of abuse, harassment and intimidation.\”

    She said that funding for the federations is linked to them enforcing their integrity policies.

    \’We don\’t want those kinds of players in our league\’: QMJHL official

    Maxime Blouin, director of communications and head of diversity and inclusion at the QMJHL, said the league should have spoken out sooner following the decision on the class-action lawsuit.

    He told CBC radio\’s Breakaway on Feb. 14, that these \”horror stories\” are completely unacceptable.

    Breakaway10:46Former junior hockey players claim to have been victims of violent hazing practices, physical and sexual abuse

    People across the province are shocked by recent allegations of sexual and physical violence in Canada’s junior hockey leagues. But the leagues themselves have stayed silent on these serious claims, until now. The head of communications for Quebec’s Major Junior League joins guest host Allison Van Rassel.

    \”If [players] witness those kind of events they hav
    e to speak up with us, with the police because those are criminal acts,\” said Blouin.

    He said the players who committed those acts are the ones who should be held accountable for the culture of abuse. He says some of it is rooted in toxic masculinity.

    \”You don\’t have to be that kind of a man to be part of a hockey team. That\’s not what we want for sports in 2023,\” Blouin said.

    \”Because I was with some parents yesterday saying: \’I don\’t want my kid, my son or my daughter to play hockey anymore when I read that\’ and that\’s the image we want to change. We don\’t want those kinds of players in our league.\”

    \"Closeup
    On Wednesday, the commission will hear from representatives from QMJHL, the Canadian Hockey League, Hockey Quebec, Réseau du sport étudiant du Québec and McGill University. (Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

    He said he is confident this won\’t happen again because they now have mandatory training at the beginning of the season which includes videos, conferences and a visit by a police officer who explains the rules and laws to the players.

    As the hearings get underway on Wednesday, the commission will hear from representatives from QMJHL, the Canadian Hockey League, Hockey Quebec and the Réseau du sport étudiant du Québec.

    A representative from McGill University will also be present after several MNAs criticized the university\’s initial refusal to participate in the committee hearings.

    Support is available for anyone who has been sexually assaulted. You can access crisis lines and local support services through this Government of Canada website or the Ending Violence Association of Canada database. ​​If you\’re in immediate danger or fear for your safety or that of others around you, please call 911.



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    https://www.facebook.com/groups/www.pakistanaffairs.pk

  • Quebec launches hearings into allegations of \’horrific\’ abuse in major junior hockey | CBC News

    [

    WARNING: This article contains graphic content and may affect those who have experienced sexual violence or know someone affected by it.

    The Quebec National Assembly will begin hearings today into allegations of violence and hazing in the world of major junior hockey.

    This comes after claimants tried to launch a class-action suit against the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League (QMJHL), and other leagues and teams, saying they were responsible for a \”toxic culture\” and a \”culture of silence\” that hides predatory violence, hazing, bullying, harassment, and assaults.

    On Feb. 3 Ontario Superior Court Justice Paul Perrell refused to certify a class-action launched in 2020 with two former junior league players as lead plaintiffs: Daniel Carcillo and Garrett Taylor.

    A third plaintiff, Stephen Quirk, who is a former QMJHL player, later joined Carcillo and Taylor in the lawsuit.

    The suit covered events in the QMJHL, the Western Hockey League and the Ontario Hockey League, going back to May 8, 1975 — the date the Canadian Hockey League was founded.

    Justice Perrell described the evidence from Quirk, Carcillo and Taylor and other former players who submitted written statements as \”horrific.\”

    Judge calls plaintiffs \’genuine heroes\’

    Carcillo, Taylor, and Quirk had claims against five hockey teams — the Lethbridge Hurricanes, the Prince Albert Raiders, the Sarnia Sting, the Moncton Wildcats and the Halifax Mooseheads.

    The Halifax and Moncton teams belong to the QMJHL, which in addition to its teams in Quebec, operates six teams in the Maritimes.

    Perrell described the three men as part of a group of elite athletes who left their families and hometowns to join teams with the hope of improving their skills.

    Although the judge called the former players \”genuine heroes\” he said they failed to provide a \”workable litigation plan,\” and for that reason denied their request to certify a class-action lawsuit.

    He said it was not conceivable that a singular class-action would deal with the \”evil that has persisted for half a century in amateur hockey.\”

    \"A
    The director of communications and head of diversity and inclusion at the QMJHL, said the league wants to reassure parents that their children will be safe. (Peter Evans/CBC)

    \’I do not want any other child to go through what I did\’

    As part of the decision, Perrell included the testimony of six unnamed former hockey players all of whom described months of abuse they endured as rookies on various teams.

    A former hockey player identified as \”AA\” said the general manager of his hockey team told him not to be a \”pussy\” when the hazing got bad. He recalled getting jumped by veteran players in the locker room.

    A player identified as \”FF\” said the coaches did not intervene.

    \”This happened in the showers, on the bus, or elsewhere. The coaches and team staff saw and knew,\” said FF, adding that after he was traded, he experienced the same type of hazing.

    \”My time in major junior hockey has left me mentally scarred. I\’ve lived with it my whole life […], but I cannot keep it secret anymore. I live with anxiety every day. I used to have nightmares, which I rarely have any more, but my anxiety is always there …. My story has been extremely difficult but am telling it because I do not want any other child to go through what I did.\”

    Legault asked QMJHL \’to explain themselves\’

    Last week, Premier François Legault said the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League could not remain silent. He called the abuse detailed by the judge \”very serious.\”

    \"Quebec
    Quebec Premier François Legault was at a news conference, earlier this month at the legislature in Quebec City. Legault called on the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League to provide a public explanation. (Jacques Boissinot/The Canadian Press)

    Isabelle Charest, the provincial minister responsible for sports, said reports of the abuse had left her speechless.

    Charest said the independent complaints officer\’s mandate is to handle situations such as this one and noted that all sports federations must have a policy of integrity in place that ensures the environment is \”free of abuse, harassment and intimidation.\”

    She said that funding for the federations is linked to them enforcing their integrity policies.

    \’We don\’t want those kinds of players in our league\’: QMJHL official

    Maxime Blouin, director of communications and head of diversity and inclusion at the QMJHL, said the league should have spoken out sooner following the decision on the class-action lawsuit.

    He told CBC radio\’s Breakaway on Feb. 14, that these \”horror stories\” are completely unacceptable.

    Breakaway10:46Former junior hockey players claim to have been victims of violent hazing practices, physical and sexual abuse

    People across the province are shocked by recent allegations of sexual and physical violence in Canada’s junior hockey leagues. But the leagues themselves have stayed silent on these serious claims, until now. The head of communications for Quebec’s Major Junior League joins guest host Allison Van Rassel.

    \”If [players] witness those kind of events they hav
    e to speak up with us, with the police because those are criminal acts,\” said Blouin.

    He said the players who committed those acts are the ones who should be held accountable for the culture of abuse. He says some of it is rooted in toxic masculinity.

    \”You don\’t have to be that kind of a man to be part of a hockey team. That\’s not what we want for sports in 2023,\” Blouin said.

    \”Because I was with some parents yesterday saying: \’I don\’t want my kid, my son or my daughter to play hockey anymore when I read that\’ and that\’s the image we want to change. We don\’t want those kinds of players in our league.\”

    \"Closeup
    On Wednesday, the commission will hear from representatives from QMJHL, the Canadian Hockey League, Hockey Quebec, Réseau du sport étudiant du Québec and McGill University. (Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

    He said he is confident this won\’t happen again because they now have mandatory training at the beginning of the season which includes videos, conferences and a visit by a police officer who explains the rules and laws to the players.

    As the hearings get underway on Wednesday, the commission will hear from representatives from QMJHL, the Canadian Hockey League, Hockey Quebec and the Réseau du sport étudiant du Québec.

    A representative from McGill University will also be present after several MNAs criticized the university\’s initial refusal to participate in the committee hearings.

    Support is available for anyone who has been sexually assaulted. You can access crisis lines and local support services through this Government of Canada website or the Ending Violence Association of Canada database. ​​If you\’re in immediate danger or fear for your safety or that of others around you, please call 911.



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    https://www.facebook.com/groups/www.pakistanaffairs.pk

  • Quebec launches hearings into allegations of \’horrific\’ abuse in major junior hockey | CBC News

    [

    WARNING: This article contains graphic content and may affect those who have experienced sexual violence or know someone affected by it.

    The Quebec National Assembly will begin hearings today into allegations of violence and hazing in the world of major junior hockey.

    This comes after claimants tried to launch a class-action suit against the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League (QMJHL), and other leagues and teams, saying they were responsible for a \”toxic culture\” and a \”culture of silence\” that hides predatory violence, hazing, bullying, harassment, and assaults.

    On Feb. 3 Ontario Superior Court Justice Paul Perrell refused to certify a class-action launched in 2020 with two former junior league players as lead plaintiffs: Daniel Carcillo and Garrett Taylor.

    A third plaintiff, Stephen Quirk, who is a former QMJHL player, later joined Carcillo and Taylor in the lawsuit.

    The suit covered events in the QMJHL, the Western Hockey League and the Ontario Hockey League, going back to May 8, 1975 — the date the Canadian Hockey League was founded.

    Justice Perrell described the evidence from Quirk, Carcillo and Taylor and other former players who submitted written statements as \”horrific.\”

    Judge calls plaintiffs \’genuine heroes\’

    Carcillo, Taylor, and Quirk had claims against five hockey teams — the Lethbridge Hurricanes, the Prince Albert Raiders, the Sarnia Sting, the Moncton Wildcats and the Halifax Mooseheads.

    The Halifax and Moncton teams belong to the QMJHL, which in addition to its teams in Quebec, operates six teams in the Maritimes.

    Perrell described the three men as part of a group of elite athletes who left their families and hometowns to join teams with the hope of improving their skills.

    Although the judge called the former players \”genuine heroes\” he said they failed to provide a \”workable litigation plan,\” and for that reason denied their request to certify a class-action lawsuit.

    He said it was not conceivable that a singular class-action would deal with the \”evil that has persisted for half a century in amateur hockey.\”

    \"A
    The director of communications and head of diversity and inclusion at the QMJHL, said the league wants to reassure parents that their children will be safe. (Peter Evans/CBC)

    \’I do not want any other child to go through what I did\’

    As part of the decision, Perrell included the testimony of six unnamed former hockey players all of whom described months of abuse they endured as rookies on various teams.

    A former hockey player identified as \”AA\” said the general manager of his hockey team told him not to be a \”pussy\” when the hazing got bad. He recalled getting jumped by veteran players in the locker room.

    A player identified as \”FF\” said the coaches did not intervene.

    \”This happened in the showers, on the bus, or elsewhere. The coaches and team staff saw and knew,\” said FF, adding that after he was traded, he experienced the same type of hazing.

    \”My time in major junior hockey has left me mentally scarred. I\’ve lived with it my whole life […], but I cannot keep it secret anymore. I live with anxiety every day. I used to have nightmares, which I rarely have any more, but my anxiety is always there …. My story has been extremely difficult but am telling it because I do not want any other child to go through what I did.\”

    Legault asked QMJHL \’to explain themselves\’

    Last week, Premier François Legault said the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League could not remain silent. He called the abuse detailed by the judge \”very serious.\”

    \"Quebec
    Quebec Premier François Legault was at a news conference, earlier this month at the legislature in Quebec City. Legault called on the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League to provide a public explanation. (Jacques Boissinot/The Canadian Press)

    Isabelle Charest, the provincial minister responsible for sports, said reports of the abuse had left her speechless.

    Charest said the independent complaints officer\’s mandate is to handle situations such as this one and noted that all sports federations must have a policy of integrity in place that ensures the environment is \”free of abuse, harassment and intimidation.\”

    She said that funding for the federations is linked to them enforcing their integrity policies.

    \’We don\’t want those kinds of players in our league\’: QMJHL official

    Maxime Blouin, director of communications and head of diversity and inclusion at the QMJHL, said the league should have spoken out sooner following the decision on the class-action lawsuit.

    He told CBC radio\’s Breakaway on Feb. 14, that these \”horror stories\” are completely unacceptable.

    Breakaway10:46Former junior hockey players claim to have been victims of violent hazing practices, physical and sexual abuse

    People across the province are shocked by recent allegations of sexual and physical violence in Canada’s junior hockey leagues. But the leagues themselves have stayed silent on these serious claims, until now. The head of communications for Quebec’s Major Junior League joins guest host Allison Van Rassel.

    \”If [players] witness those kind of events they hav
    e to speak up with us, with the police because those are criminal acts,\” said Blouin.

    He said the players who committed those acts are the ones who should be held accountable for the culture of abuse. He says some of it is rooted in toxic masculinity.

    \”You don\’t have to be that kind of a man to be part of a hockey team. That\’s not what we want for sports in 2023,\” Blouin said.

    \”Because I was with some parents yesterday saying: \’I don\’t want my kid, my son or my daughter to play hockey anymore when I read that\’ and that\’s the image we want to change. We don\’t want those kinds of players in our league.\”

    \"Closeup
    On Wednesday, the commission will hear from representatives from QMJHL, the Canadian Hockey League, Hockey Quebec, Réseau du sport étudiant du Québec and McGill University. (Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

    He said he is confident this won\’t happen again because they now have mandatory training at the beginning of the season which includes videos, conferences and a visit by a police officer who explains the rules and laws to the players.

    As the hearings get underway on Wednesday, the commission will hear from representatives from QMJHL, the Canadian Hockey League, Hockey Quebec and the Réseau du sport étudiant du Québec.

    A representative from McGill University will also be present after several MNAs criticized the university\’s initial refusal to participate in the committee hearings.

    Support is available for anyone who has been sexually assaulted. You can access crisis lines and local support services through this Government of Canada website or the Ending Violence Association of Canada database. ​​If you\’re in immediate danger or fear for your safety or that of others around you, please call 911.



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    Join our Facebook page
    https://www.facebook.com/groups/www.pakistanaffairs.pk

  • Quebec launches hearings into allegations of \’horrific\’ abuse in major junior hockey | CBC News

    [

    WARNING: This article contains graphic content and may affect those who have experienced sexual violence or know someone affected by it.

    The Quebec National Assembly will begin hearings today into allegations of violence and hazing in the world of major junior hockey.

    This comes after claimants tried to launch a class-action suit against the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League (QMJHL), and other leagues and teams, saying they were responsible for a \”toxic culture\” and a \”culture of silence\” that hides predatory violence, hazing, bullying, harassment, and assaults.

    On Feb. 3 Ontario Superior Court Justice Paul Perrell refused to certify a class-action launched in 2020 with two former junior league players as lead plaintiffs: Daniel Carcillo and Garrett Taylor.

    A third plaintiff, Stephen Quirk, who is a former QMJHL player, later joined Carcillo and Taylor in the lawsuit.

    The suit covered events in the QMJHL, the Western Hockey League and the Ontario Hockey League, going back to May 8, 1975 — the date the Canadian Hockey League was founded.

    Justice Perrell described the evidence from Quirk, Carcillo and Taylor and other former players who submitted written statements as \”horrific.\”

    Judge calls plaintiffs \’genuine heroes\’

    Carcillo, Taylor, and Quirk had claims against five hockey teams — the Lethbridge Hurricanes, the Prince Albert Raiders, the Sarnia Sting, the Moncton Wildcats and the Halifax Mooseheads.

    The Halifax and Moncton teams belong to the QMJHL, which in addition to its teams in Quebec, operates six teams in the Maritimes.

    Perrell described the three men as part of a group of elite athletes who left their families and hometowns to join teams with the hope of improving their skills.

    Although the judge called the former players \”genuine heroes\” he said they failed to provide a \”workable litigation plan,\” and for that reason denied their request to certify a class-action lawsuit.

    He said it was not conceivable that a singular class-action would deal with the \”evil that has persisted for half a century in amateur hockey.\”

    \"A
    The director of communications and head of diversity and inclusion at the QMJHL, said the league wants to reassure parents that their children will be safe. (Peter Evans/CBC)

    \’I do not want any other child to go through what I did\’

    As part of the decision, Perrell included the testimony of six unnamed former hockey players all of whom described months of abuse they endured as rookies on various teams.

    A former hockey player identified as \”AA\” said the general manager of his hockey team told him not to be a \”pussy\” when the hazing got bad. He recalled getting jumped by veteran players in the locker room.

    A player identified as \”FF\” said the coaches did not intervene.

    \”This happened in the showers, on the bus, or elsewhere. The coaches and team staff saw and knew,\” said FF, adding that after he was traded, he experienced the same type of hazing.

    \”My time in major junior hockey has left me mentally scarred. I\’ve lived with it my whole life […], but I cannot keep it secret anymore. I live with anxiety every day. I used to have nightmares, which I rarely have any more, but my anxiety is always there …. My story has been extremely difficult but am telling it because I do not want any other child to go through what I did.\”

    Legault asked QMJHL \’to explain themselves\’

    Last week, Premier François Legault said the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League could not remain silent. He called the abuse detailed by the judge \”very serious.\”

    \"Quebec
    Quebec Premier François Legault was at a news conference, earlier this month at the legislature in Quebec City. Legault called on the Quebec Major Junior Hockey League to provide a public explanation. (Jacques Boissinot/The Canadian Press)

    Isabelle Charest, the provincial minister responsible for sports, said reports of the abuse had left her speechless.

    Charest said the independent complaints officer\’s mandate is to handle situations such as this one and noted that all sports federations must have a policy of integrity in place that ensures the environment is \”free of abuse, harassment and intimidation.\”

    She said that funding for the federations is linked to them enforcing their integrity policies.

    \’We don\’t want those kinds of players in our league\’: QMJHL official

    Maxime Blouin, director of communications and head of diversity and inclusion at the QMJHL, said the league should have spoken out sooner following the decision on the class-action lawsuit.

    He told CBC radio\’s Breakaway on Feb. 14, that these \”horror stories\” are completely unacceptable.

    Breakaway10:46Former junior hockey players claim to have been victims of violent hazing practices, physical and sexual abuse

    People across the province are shocked by recent allegations of sexual and physical violence in Canada’s junior hockey leagues. But the leagues themselves have stayed silent on these serious claims, until now. The head of communications for Quebec’s Major Junior League joins guest host Allison Van Rassel.

    \”If [players] witness those kind of events they hav
    e to speak up with us, with the police because those are criminal acts,\” said Blouin.

    He said the players who committed those acts are the ones who should be held accountable for the culture of abuse. He says some of it is rooted in toxic masculinity.

    \”You don\’t have to be that kind of a man to be part of a hockey team. That\’s not what we want for sports in 2023,\” Blouin said.

    \”Because I was with some parents yesterday saying: \’I don\’t want my kid, my son or my daughter to play hockey anymore when I read that\’ and that\’s the image we want to change. We don\’t want those kinds of players in our league.\”

    \"Closeup
    On Wednesday, the commission will hear from representatives from QMJHL, the Canadian Hockey League, Hockey Quebec, Réseau du sport étudiant du Québec and McGill University. (Bruce Bennett/Getty Images)

    He said he is confident this won\’t happen again because they now have mandatory training at the beginning of the season which includes videos, conferences and a visit by a police officer who explains the rules and laws to the players.

    As the hearings get underway on Wednesday, the commission will hear from representatives from QMJHL, the Canadian Hockey League, Hockey Quebec and the Réseau du sport étudiant du Québec.

    A representative from McGill University will also be present after several MNAs criticized the university\’s initial refusal to participate in the committee hearings.

    Support is available for anyone who has been sexually assaulted. You can access crisis lines and local support services through this Government of Canada website or the Ending Violence Association of Canada database. ​​If you\’re in immediate danger or fear for your safety or that of others around you, please call 911.



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  • ANALYSIS | Bank of Canada might need to raise rates if companies keep raising prices, Macklem warns | CBC News

    [

    It may sound like a circular argument, but the only way to stop inflation is to stop companies from raising prices. And the only way to stop that is to get inflation under control. And that could mean an end to the interest rate hike pause.

    After Tuesday\’s latest release of inflation data, warnings from Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem in his testimony to parliament last week offer a stark reminder of how difficult, but how essential, it is to convince the sellers of goods and services to stop raising prices.

    While overall inflation has eased to 5.9 per cent, that\’s still high. Groceries are up another 11.4 per cent. 

    That\’s difficult for consumers, whether businesses buying from other businesses or ordinary Canadian shoppers. Macklem said they simply cannot distinguish reasonable and necessary price rises to cover rising costs from price hikes merely to pad the bottom line.

    He warns sellers: if price hikes continue at the pace we\’ve seen recently, he may be forced to take action. 

    Hidden in plain sight

    The latest slowdown in rising prices, finally falling below six per cent for the first time since February a year ago, is being read by many as a favourable sign.

    Though it\’s useful to view that number in context: that\’s 5.9 per cent higher than a year ago when prices were already rising quickly, or what economists call the \”base-year effect.\” 

    A fall in global oil prices, which last week Macklem described as the \”biggest contributor\” to falling inflation, obscure the rising cost of other consumer necessities, like food.

    As people as diverse as Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell and Canadian labour economist Jim Stanford have noted, despite continued talk of a wage-price spiral, wages have not led the post-COVID bout of inflation. Wage hikes have steadily been below inflation. Latest Canadian jobs figures show wage hikes are declining, currently running at 4.5 per cent, more than a full percentage point below rising prices.

    \”It looks more like profit-price inflation to me where companies very opportunistically have taken advantage of a disruptive moment to soak consumers for more than they need to,\” was Stanford\’s analysis in an interview with the CBC last year.

    And in last Thursday\’s testimony to the Parliamentary Finance Committee, Macklem seemed to agree.

    \"Can
    The failure of businesses to \’normalize\’ pricing, testified Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem, is one of the things that could force the central bank to end its pause and keep raising interest rates. (Blair Gable/Reuters)

    Macklem explained that a period of generally rising prices is a special opportunity for sellers. In the confusion of widespread price increases, consumers simply cannot distinguish between reasonable price increases due to a discreet cause — a frost in Florida that raises orange prices, for example — and price hikes meant to squeeze the customer and increase profits.

    \”When an economy is overheated, when inflation is high, when people see prices of everything going up, it makes it easier for companies to raise their prices because people can\’t tell, is this … a generalized increase or is this just this company raising their prices?\” testified Macklem last week.

    In economics, the general principle is that sellers want to raise their prices as much as possible to maximize their profits. One of the reasons businesses have trouble doing that in normal, non-inflationary times is that consumers keep an eagle eye on price hikes and shun sellers they think are being greedy. But during periods of high inflation, unjustified individual price hikes are harder to distinguish and therefore retailers are harder to punish.

    WATCH | What\’s causing inflation to slow: 

    \"\"

    Chicken prices soar as inflation cools

    Inflation in Canada is down to 5.9 per cent, but food prices are still high with chicken becoming a big-ticket item on the grocery bill.

    \”When the economy is better balanced between supply and demand, the competitive function works much better and it\’s a lot more difficult for companies to raise prices because they\’ll lose market share,\” said Macklem. 

    \”They\’ll lose their customers.\”

    Bigger, more frequent price hikes

    This round of inflation had real causes: when supply chains suddenly gummed up and oil prices soared, many sellers were forced to raise their prices. Higher fuel costs and a shortage of cargo vessels meant goods cost more to ship. High worldwide demand for goods in short supply pushed input prices higher. 

    Essentially everyone who could was just doing their best to pass on their higher costs causing an unfamiliar flurry of pricing activity that h
    ad not been seen in decades, Bank of Canada research showed.

    \”The distribution of price-setting behaviour of companies changed,\” Macklem told the parliamentary committee members. \”Pricing increases were bigger, they were more frequent.\”

    But as supply chains opened up those price hikes should have begun to cool down.

    The debate over whether grocery retailers in particular have raised prices too much continues to rage and may be revisited later this week when food retailer Loblaws unveils its corporate results on Thursday. The company, like other grocery chains, insists its price rises reflect increased costs.

    Critics have pointed to soaring profits. 

    The correlation between Loblaw\’s share price and the take-off of inflation in Canada is uncanny. While grocery CEOs complain they are just victims of inflation like the rest of us, merely \”passing on\” higher costs, their investors know otherwise. /2 <a href=\”https://t.co/U1GParvi0u\”>pic.twitter.com/U1GParvi0u</a>

    &mdash;@JimboStanford

    It may be that shareholders will rejoice if they see profits continue to rise at the expense of consumer prices but if the pace and size of price hikes don\’t go back the way they used to be, to \”normalize\” in Bank of Canada language, Macklem says he has a surprise up his sleeve.

    There are many sceptics who say inflation has no intention of going peacefully and that it will be \”sticky.\” The last time rising prices got seriously out of hand, \”The Great Inflation,\” only ended in the 1980s after a brutal interest-rate shock that saw mortgage rates approach 20 per cent. That ended inflation with a bang and a devastating recession.

    So far central bankers seem confident that won\’t happen this time. But if businesses don\’t get pricing under control soon, Macklem said he will have to do something about it.

    \”That process of normalization is one of the key things we\’re watching to evaluate whether we raised interest rates enough to get inflation back down to target,\” testified Macklem.

    \”And if we don\’t see it continue to normalize, we will need to do more.\”





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  • Why this Russian immigrant is helping Ukrainians resettle in Canada | CBC Radio

    [

    The Current19:10Russian-Canadian helps Ukrainians resettle across Canada

    Russian-Canadian Katya Sundukova has hosted 15 families from Ukraine in her Ontario home over the past year. We hear how and why she’s helped so many families settle into Canada.

    Katya Sundukova is one of many people in Canada who have opened the doors of their homes to Ukrainians fleeing their country after Russia\’s invasion.

    But she has to face one hurdle when she first meets a new guest: Sundukova is Russian.

    \”I had a little bit of anxiety when our first family arrived,\” said Sundukova, who lives with her husband Jason Campbell in Caledon Hills, Ont., about an hour\’s drive north of Toronto.

    But after some \”heart-to-heart\” discussion, she and her guests are at ease.

    \”I think it\’s my personal healing process from, you know, the pain that we all experience as Russians and Ukrainians, you know, being put into this situation where brothers and sisters are in the conflict now.\”

    Sundukova, a permanent resident who has lived in Canada for 10 years, has hosted 32 Ukrainians, including 14 families, in her home over the past year. She says their length of stay varies anywhere from two days to two months.

    The fleeing Ukrainians met Sundukova through grassroots Facebook groups and ICanHelp.host, an international network of volunteers working to connect Ukrainians with prospective hosts around the world. The Canadian government has authorized Ukrainians to come to Canada through the Canada-Ukraine Authorization for Emergency Travel program.

    She then helps them look for possible longer-term housing and work, including connecting them with potential employers to refining their cover letters.

    But she can\’t help everyone who asks. Since putting her contact information on ICanHelp.host, she says she gets as many as 20 requests a day from people hoping to stay with her.

    Olha\’s journey

    Olha Sukhina and her three children fled their beloved hometown of Odesa, southern Ukraine, on Feb. 24, 2022 — the day the war began.

    They stayed with Sundukova for two weeks, before moving to Owen Sound, Ont. The municipality, with the support of local businesses, was offering free rent to Ukrainian women and children fleeing the war.

    Sukhina lived in Owen Sound rent-free for the first six months, and is still paying below market value. She\’s currently working in a kitchen. She\’s also started her own business selling perogies and borscht at the local farmers\’ market.

    Her arrival followed a fraught journey that included driving across a bridge in the dark of night as Russian ships watched from just offshore, holing up in a small village close to the Ukraine-Romania border, and spending three months in a Bulgarian hotel with about 2,000 other Ukrainians who had also fled.

    At the camp, she helped organize doctor visits and manage their medical supplies, despite having no experience in health care, amidst outbreaks of COVID-19 and chickenpox.

    \”Oh my God, it was a crazy time,\” she recalled.

    \"Two
    Olha Sukhina, left, and Katya Sundukova, right. When Sukhina fled Ukraine because of the Russian invasion last year, she stayed with Sundukova for a few weeks as she figured out the details of her resettlement in Canada. The two remain close friends. (John Chipman/CBC)

    For a time, listening to someone speak Russian pained Sukhina emotionally. But she was able to move past the immediate trauma, at least for now, by remembering her own mixed Ukrainian and Russian heritage.

    \”When I ask questions of myself — who I am — I am a woman. I am mixed. It\’s normal,\” she said.

    \”Nationalities [are] no good. It\’s government, it\’s political. The people need to know: we are human.\”

    Katya\’s house

    Sundukova\’s home is spacious, with four floors of living space, three bedrooms and a large loft. Oh, and don\’t forget the large yurt in their yard. It\’s nestled in a serene rural setting, on almost 10 hectares of woodland criss-crossed with creeks and trails.

    That doesn\’t mean it doesn\’t get cramped. Sundukova recalled once hosting two families, a total of eight people.

    \”It was actually our first guests because they didn\’t want to separate. They were quite scared and they wanted to stay together,\” she recalled.

    Despite their impressive home, Sundukova says she and her family aren\’t \”cash-rich\” enough to sponsor all of their hosts for their travel from Ukraine to Canada.

    \"Two
    Katya Sundukova, left, sits with Olha Sukhina and Sukhina\’s three children. Sukhina stayed with Sundukova for two weeks last year after fleeing Odesa, Ukraine. She later settled in Owen Sound, Ont. (John Chipman/CBC)

    She and Campbell both work in event planning, a field that has suffered since the pandemic. To adapt, she started breeding dogs, and hopes to host meditation retreats in their yurt if she can get the permits sorted out.

    Ultimately, she can\’t do much to help them until
    they\’ve arrived on Canadian soil.

    \”We just offered our house and food and the drives [around town] so they at some point, you know, could get a job, could find a place, and go on their own,\” she said.

    Campbell says many of the people they\’ve met might become lifelong friends.

    \”[It] not only makes you feel better for doing something to help, but also just meeting all these new families and, you know, seeing them start new lives here, it\’s rewarding,\” he said.

    \’Absolutely grateful\’

    One of Sundukova\’s recent guests didn\’t realize at first that Sundukova was Russian, but it matters little to him.

    \”I\’m absolutely grateful to [her]. I do not see the person by their nation. I do see the person by their actions,\” said the man in his mid-20s, who arrived earlier this month from Kyiv. The CBC has agreed to call him Sasha, as he fears repercussions if his real name were used.

    The first days of the war were \”terrifying\” while he was living with his parents in Kyiv, Sasha recalled. 

    \”The hardest thing was, I guess just all of your plans ruined, like with a blink of an eye. So you had your life planned out and boom, there was war.\”

    \"A
    Katya Sundukova standing outside a yurt that she and her husband built on their property in Caledon Hills, Ont. (John Chipman/CBC)

    Both of Sasha\’s parents are still in Kyiv, and his sister is currently living elsewhere in Europe. But he felt coming to Canada would be a better fit, with his English skills.

    Staying in Sundukova\’s home for a few weeks has provided a well-appreciated respite.

    \”I do feel like it is some kind of chateau or like a villa in the Alps. Maybe because of the snow,\” he said.

    \’Their hearts are still in their country\’

    Sundukova took her first break from hosting Ukrainians fleeing the war just before Christmas, citing burnout and a need to recharge.

    She knows that even with her help, it will still be a long road ahead for many of them, whether they choose to stay in Canada long-term or hope to return to Ukraine one day.

    \”I wouldn\’t say they\’re flourishing. Like … they struggle to pay their rent. Most of them are on minimum [wage]. So they still use food banks. They cannot afford a car, cannot afford normal things which they used to have,\” she said.

    \”And they are watching the news daily. So they\’re heartbroken. Their hearts are still in their country.\”

    \"Composite
    Ukrainians who stayed with Katya Sundukova after fleeing the Russian invasion as part of their resettlement in Canada return for a New Year\’s costume party in Sundukova\’s yurt in Caledon Hills, Ont., in January 2023. (John Chipman/CBC)

    Sukhina admitted that at times, she had felt like \”a robot,\” disconnected from joy, once the initial euphoria of arriving in Canada wore off.

    \”One time I said, \’you need to look at the sky. It\’s the star, it\’s the sun, it\’s the moon. You need to be happy you\’re alive. It\’s OK, and your kids are with you,\’\” she said.

    Even on their off time, Sundukova invited some former house guests to their yurt, and threw a New Year\’s party.

    \”We made up a play, like a little kind of a family theatre event, and we had 35 actors participating in it,\” she said. 

    They\’re already expecting their next family next month. She has no doubt that by helping Ukrainians fleeing the war, she has helped herself, too.

    \”I know how much pain there still is with anybody who is from Ukraine or Russia or anywhere near there,\” she said.

    \”So I\’ll just help as long as I can.\”



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  • Petition calls for pro hockey\’s first Black coach to be inducted into Hall of Fame | CBC Sports

    پیشہ ورانہ ہاکی کے پہلے سیاہ فام کوچ جان پیرس جونیئر کو ہاکی ہال آف فیم میں شامل کرنے کے لیے نچلی سطح پر کوششیں جاری ہیں۔

    ہاکی نووا اسکاٹیا نے 1 فروری کو \”پیرس ٹو ٹورنٹو\” کے نام سے ایک پٹیشن شروع کی، جس میں نووا اسکاٹیا میں پیدا ہونے والے پیرس سے مطالبہ کیا گیا کہ وہ کھیل میں ان کی شراکت کے لیے ٹورنٹو میں واقع ہال کو تسلیم کرے۔

    پیرس، 76، نے منگل کو ہیلی فیکس سے ایک انٹرویو میں کہا کہ تمام توجہ غیر متوقع تھی. \”یہ عاجز ہے، میں یقینی طور پر یہ کہہ سکتا ہوں،\” انہوں نے کہا، \”صرف حقیقت یہ ہے کہ انہوں نے نتائج سے قطع نظر، میرے بارے میں سوچنے میں بھی وقت نکالا۔\”

    اس کے ریزیومے پر متعدد فرسٹ ہیں، جن میں کیوبیک میجر جونیئر ہاکی لیگ میں پہلا سیاہ فام کوچ، سینٹ لوئس بلوز کے ساتھ NHL میں پہلا سیاہ فام اسکاؤٹ، پیشہ ورانہ ہاکی میں پہلا سیاہ فام جنرل منیجر اور پہلا سیاہ فام پروفیشنل شامل ہیں۔ ہاکی کوچ، اٹلانٹا نائٹس کو اب معدوم بین الاقوامی ہاکی لیگ میں ٹرنر کپ تک لے جا رہے ہیں۔

    طویل فہرست کے باوجود، وہ اپنے کیریئر کو ٹوٹی ہوئی رکاوٹوں کے تسلسل کے طور پر نہیں دیکھتا۔

    \”ٹھیک ہے، میں نے ہمیشہ یہی کہا ہے کہ میں فطرت کے لحاظ سے سیاہ فام ہوں اور میں انتخاب کے لحاظ سے کوچ ہوں، اور اس میں ایک فرق ہے،\” پیرس نے کہا۔ \”میں جانتا ہوں کہ میں کیا رنگ ہوں، جب وہ مجھے دیکھتے ہیں تو ہر کوئی جانتا ہے، اس کا بطور کوچ میری شرکت سے کوئی تعلق نہیں ہے – یہ ایک فیصلہ ہے۔\”

    پیرس، ایک باصلاحیت پانچ فٹ پانچ کھلاڑی، کو 1960 کی دہائی کے اوائل میں کیوبیک میں جونیئر ہاکی کھیلنے کے لیے Scotty Bowman نے اسکاؤٹ کیا تھا، مستقبل کے NHL ہیڈ کوچ اور جنرل منیجر نے بھرتی کے لیے ونڈسر، NS میں اپنے خاندانی گھر کا دورہ کیا تھا۔ اسے اس کا کھیل کا کیریئر بیماری کی وجہ سے ختم ہو گیا تھا، لیکن اس کا کوچنگ کیریئر مونٹریال سے تقریباً 90 کلومیٹر مشرق میں شروع ہوا۔

    پیرس نے کہا کہ سینٹ-جوزف-ڈی-سوریل قصبے کے کھیل اور تفریح ​​کے ڈائریکٹر شارلمین پیلوکین نے 1969 میں مقامی جونیئر ٹیم کی کوچنگ کے لیے ان سے رابطہ کیا۔

    ہمیں آج اپنے کھیل میں ہاکی کے علمبردار جان پیرس جونیئر کو پہچاننے کا موقع ملنے پر فخر ہے۔ آئیے جان کو ہاکی ہال آف فیم میں لانے میں مدد کریں۔

    درخواست پر دستخط کریں اور مزید جانیں https://t.co/qpmTM7NQoP< پر | @HockeyNS pic.twitter.com/ 5Hl28y5GFO

    @HFXMooseheads

    \”میں نے اس کی طرف دیکھا اور میں نے کہا، \’مسٹر پیلوکین، ہاکی میں کوئی سیاہ فام کوچنگ نہیں کر رہا ہے۔\’ میں نے کہا، \’آپ خود کو ترتیب دے رہے ہیں شاید کچھ مسائل ہوں،\’ پیرس نے یاد کیا۔ \”اور اس نے میری طرف دیکھا اور اس نے کہا، \’میں نے بلیک کے بارے میں کچھ نہیں کہا۔ میں نے کہا کہ مجھے کوچ چاہیے، آپ وہی ہیں جو ہم چاہتے ہیں۔\’

    انہوں نے کہا کہ ان میں سے بہت سے پہلے کھلاڑی اور ان کے اہل خانہ دوست رہتے ہیں۔ \”ہم آج بھی بہت تنگ ہیں، یہ وہ خطہ ہے جہاں میں نے اپنی کوچنگ کا آغاز کیا تھا، اور یہیں سے اس کا آغاز ہوا،\” انہوں نے کہا۔

    پیرس کبھی نووا سکوشیا واپس نہیں آیا اور کیوبیک میں کیریئر کی ایک طویل کوچنگ کے لیے چلا گیا، جو زیادہ تر صوبے کے دیہی علاقوں میں رہتا ہے۔ اب وہ ٹیکساس میں رہتا ہے۔

    پیرس نے کہا، \”جب میں کیوبیک پہنچا، تو میں تھوڑا ڈرپوک تھا، ایک چھوٹا سا دیسی ٹکرانا چھوٹے شہر سے آ رہا تھا۔\” \”لہذا میں فرانسیسی معاشرے میں رہتا تھا اور میں اس کے اندر آرام دہ اور پرسکون تھا۔ [and] کئی دہائیوں سے مجھے اپنے خاندان کے باہر مانٹریال میں چند دوستوں کے ساتھ انگریزی سے بہت کم بات چیت ہوئی تھی۔\”

    چیمپئن شپ کا ریکارڈ

    پیرس کا کہنا ہے کہ بطور کوچ ان کا سب سے یادگار کارنامہ 1987 میں ایک ایئر کینیڈا کپ چیمپئن شپ (جو اب ٹیلس کپ کے نام سے جانا جاتا ہے) میں رچیلیو ریورینز کی رہنمائی کرنا تھا، جو سرکاری قومی انڈر 18 بوائز ہاکی ٹورنامنٹ تھا۔

    انہوں نے کہا کہ جب ہم کیوبیک سے باہر آئے تو ہم سب سے کم عمر ٹیم تھے۔ ہمیں انڈر ڈاگ سمجھا جاتا تھا لیکن ہم نے کبھی کوئی گیم نہیں ہاری۔ \”لیکن یہ ریکارڈ اب بھی برقرار ہے: 1987 میں جب سے ہم نے یہ کیا تھا وہاں کوئی ٹیم ایسی نہیں ہے جو اس کپ کو جیتنے کے لئے ضابطے کے وقت میں ناقابل شکست رہی ہو۔\”

    اس کے بعد، پیرس نے اٹلانٹا میں پیشہ ورانہ چھوٹی لیگوں میں چھلانگ لگانے سے پہلے QMJHL میں Granby اور St-Jean-sur-Richelieu میں کوچنگ اسٹاپس کی، جہاں اس نے چیمپئن شپ جیتی۔ اس سے پہلے، وہ سینٹ لوئس بلیوز کے ساتھ NHL میں پہلے بلیک اسکاؤٹ بھی تھے۔

    تاریخ کی یادگاری

    ڈارٹ ماؤتھ میں ایک ناقابل یقین رات جب دو آل بلیک روسٹرز ایک ایسے کھیل میں آمنے سامنے ہوئے جس نے میری ٹائمز کی کلرڈ ہاکی لیگ کے افتتاحی میچ کی یادگاری تھی۔

    برادرز جان پیرس جونیئر اور پرسی پیرس بنچوں کے پیچھے تھے۔#ParisToToronto | #nsproud pic.twitter.com/6On2dVvHMW

    @HackeyNS

    وہ پیشہ ورانہ ہاکی میں پہلے سیاہ فام جنرل منیجر بھی تھے، جو کیوبیک جونیئر صفوں میں کردار ادا کرتے رہے اور سینٹرل ہاکی لیگ میں جارجیا میں مقیم ایک ناکارہ ٹیم میکن ہوو
    پی کے ساتھ۔

    پیرس اب بھی ہاکی میں شامل ہے، ایک بیرونی مشیر کے طور پر کام کر رہا ہے تاکہ NHL کے کچھ کھلاڑیوں کو ان کی کھیل کی کارکردگی میں مدد فراہم کی جا سکے۔

    ہاکی نووا اسکاٹیا میں تنوع اور شمولیت کی کرسی ڈین اسمتھ کا کہنا ہے کہ 2019 میں کھیل میں نسل پرستی اور امتیازی سلوک کو دیکھنے کے لیے ٹاسک فورس کی سفارشات میں سے ایک یہ تھی کہ ان لوگوں کے تعاون کو پہچاننے اور ان کو اجاگر کرنے کے طریقے تلاش کیے جائیں جن کی نمائندگی کم ہے۔

    \’اتنی معمولی اور اتنی عاجزی\’

    اسمتھ نے کہا کہ اس نے پیرس کے بارے میں جتنا زیادہ سیکھا، اتنا ہی وہ حیران ہوا کہ وہ پہلے سے ہال آف فیم میں نہیں تھا۔

    اسمتھ نے کہا، \”وہ بہت معمولی اور بہت عاجز ہے۔

    \”وہ ہاکی کے بارے میں بات کرنا پسند کرتا ہے، وہ اپنے تجربے کو میرے جیسے نوجوان جونیئر کوچز تک پہنچانا پسند کرتا ہے لیکن وہ کبھی بھی اپنے آپ کو نہیں بیچیں گے، اور میں سمجھتا ہوں کہ اب یہ ہمارا کام ہے – اس بات کو یقینی بنانا کہ اس کی تعریفیں اور ان کے کارناموں کو تسلیم کیا جائے۔ ہاکی کی اعلی ترین سطحوں سے۔\”

    ہاکی ہال آف فیم کے ایک اہلکار کا کہنا ہے کہ عوامی گذارشات کی آخری تاریخ 15 مارچ ہے۔ اسٹینلے کپ کے فائنل کے ختم ہونے کے بعد ایک سلیکشن کمیٹی امیدواروں پر غور کرنے کے لیے میٹنگ کرتی ہے۔ داخلے کے لیے 18 رکنی کمیٹی کا تین چوتھائی حصہ متفق ہونا ضروری ہے۔

    پیرس نے اعتراف کیا کہ وہ توجہ سے تھوڑا بے چین ہے۔ پیر کے روز، ہیلی فیکس موز ہیڈز گیم میں شرکت کے دوران انہیں کھڑے ہو کر داد دی گئی۔

    \”میں اس سے عاجز ہوں اور میں نووا اسکاٹیا اور میری ٹائمز کا شکریہ ادا کرتا ہوں، اور کینیڈا اور میں کہیں بھی گیا ہوں۔ میں نے یورپ اور امریکہ میں کوچنگ کی ہے… میں نے ہال آف میں جانے کے لیے کوچ نہیں کیا۔ شہرت، \”انہوں نے کہا۔ \”میں کوچ کرتا ہوں کیونکہ میں اسی سے لطف اندوز ہوتا ہوں، یہی میں کرتا ہوں۔\”

    درخواست پر منگل کی سہ پہر تک 2,300 دستخط جمع ہو چکے تھے۔





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  • Petition calls for pro hockey\’s first Black coach to be inducted into Hall of Fame | CBC Sports

    پیشہ ورانہ ہاکی کے پہلے سیاہ فام کوچ جان پیرس جونیئر کو ہاکی ہال آف فیم میں شامل کرنے کے لیے نچلی سطح پر کوششیں جاری ہیں۔

    ہاکی نووا اسکاٹیا نے 1 فروری کو \”پیرس ٹو ٹورنٹو\” کے نام سے ایک پٹیشن شروع کی، جس میں نووا اسکاٹیا میں پیدا ہونے والے پیرس سے مطالبہ کیا گیا کہ وہ کھیل میں ان کی شراکت کے لیے ٹورنٹو میں واقع ہال کو تسلیم کرے۔

    پیرس، 76، نے منگل کو ہیلی فیکس سے ایک انٹرویو میں کہا کہ تمام توجہ غیر متوقع تھی. \”یہ عاجز ہے، میں یقینی طور پر یہ کہہ سکتا ہوں،\” انہوں نے کہا، \”صرف حقیقت یہ ہے کہ انہوں نے نتائج سے قطع نظر، میرے بارے میں سوچنے میں بھی وقت نکالا۔\”

    اس کے ریزیومے پر متعدد فرسٹ ہیں، جن میں کیوبیک میجر جونیئر ہاکی لیگ میں پہلا سیاہ فام کوچ، سینٹ لوئس بلوز کے ساتھ NHL میں پہلا سیاہ فام اسکاؤٹ، پیشہ ورانہ ہاکی میں پہلا سیاہ فام جنرل منیجر اور پہلا سیاہ فام پروفیشنل شامل ہیں۔ ہاکی کوچ، اٹلانٹا نائٹس کو اب معدوم بین الاقوامی ہاکی لیگ میں ٹرنر کپ تک لے جا رہے ہیں۔

    طویل فہرست کے باوجود، وہ اپنے کیریئر کو ٹوٹی ہوئی رکاوٹوں کے تسلسل کے طور پر نہیں دیکھتا۔

    \”ٹھیک ہے، میں نے ہمیشہ یہی کہا ہے کہ میں فطرت کے لحاظ سے سیاہ فام ہوں اور میں انتخاب کے لحاظ سے کوچ ہوں، اور اس میں ایک فرق ہے،\” پیرس نے کہا۔ \”میں جانتا ہوں کہ میں کیا رنگ ہوں، جب وہ مجھے دیکھتے ہیں تو ہر کوئی جانتا ہے، اس کا بطور کوچ میری شرکت سے کوئی تعلق نہیں ہے – یہ ایک فیصلہ ہے۔\”

    پیرس، ایک باصلاحیت پانچ فٹ پانچ کھلاڑی، کو 1960 کی دہائی کے اوائل میں کیوبیک میں جونیئر ہاکی کھیلنے کے لیے Scotty Bowman نے اسکاؤٹ کیا تھا، مستقبل کے NHL ہیڈ کوچ اور جنرل منیجر نے بھرتی کے لیے ونڈسر، NS میں اپنے خاندانی گھر کا دورہ کیا تھا۔ اسے اس کا کھیل کا کیریئر بیماری کی وجہ سے ختم ہو گیا تھا، لیکن اس کا کوچنگ کیریئر مونٹریال سے تقریباً 90 کلومیٹر مشرق میں شروع ہوا۔

    پیرس نے کہا کہ سینٹ-جوزف-ڈی-سوریل قصبے کے کھیل اور تفریح ​​کے ڈائریکٹر شارلمین پیلوکین نے 1969 میں مقامی جونیئر ٹیم کی کوچنگ کے لیے ان سے رابطہ کیا۔

    ہمیں آج اپنے کھیل میں ہاکی کے علمبردار جان پیرس جونیئر کو پہچاننے کا موقع ملنے پر فخر ہے۔ آئیے جان کو ہاکی ہال آف فیم میں لانے میں مدد کریں۔

    درخواست پر دستخط کریں اور مزید جانیں https://t.co/qpmTM7NQoP< پر | @HockeyNS pic.twitter.com/ 5Hl28y5GFO

    @HFXMooseheads

    \”میں نے اس کی طرف دیکھا اور میں نے کہا، \’مسٹر پیلوکین، ہاکی میں کوئی سیاہ فام کوچنگ نہیں کر رہا ہے۔\’ میں نے کہا، \’آپ خود کو ترتیب دے رہے ہیں شاید کچھ مسائل ہوں،\’ پیرس نے یاد کیا۔ \”اور اس نے میری طرف دیکھا اور اس نے کہا، \’میں نے بلیک کے بارے میں کچھ نہیں کہا۔ میں نے کہا کہ مجھے کوچ چاہیے، آپ وہی ہیں جو ہم چاہتے ہیں۔\’

    انہوں نے کہا کہ ان میں سے بہت سے پہلے کھلاڑی اور ان کے اہل خانہ دوست رہتے ہیں۔ \”ہم آج بھی بہت تنگ ہیں، یہ وہ خطہ ہے جہاں میں نے اپنی کوچنگ کا آغاز کیا تھا، اور یہیں سے اس کا آغاز ہوا،\” انہوں نے کہا۔

    پیرس کبھی نووا سکوشیا واپس نہیں آیا اور کیوبیک میں کیریئر کی ایک طویل کوچنگ کے لیے چلا گیا، جو زیادہ تر صوبے کے دیہی علاقوں میں رہتا ہے۔ اب وہ ٹیکساس میں رہتا ہے۔

    پیرس نے کہا، \”جب میں کیوبیک پہنچا، تو میں تھوڑا ڈرپوک تھا، ایک چھوٹا سا دیسی ٹکرانا چھوٹے شہر سے آ رہا تھا۔\” \”لہذا میں فرانسیسی معاشرے میں رہتا تھا اور میں اس کے اندر آرام دہ اور پرسکون تھا۔ [and] کئی دہائیوں سے مجھے اپنے خاندان کے باہر مانٹریال میں چند دوستوں کے ساتھ انگریزی سے بہت کم بات چیت ہوئی تھی۔\”

    چیمپئن شپ کا ریکارڈ

    پیرس کا کہنا ہے کہ بطور کوچ ان کا سب سے یادگار کارنامہ 1987 میں ایک ایئر کینیڈا کپ چیمپئن شپ (جو اب ٹیلس کپ کے نام سے جانا جاتا ہے) میں رچیلیو ریورینز کی رہنمائی کرنا تھا، جو سرکاری قومی انڈر 18 بوائز ہاکی ٹورنامنٹ تھا۔

    انہوں نے کہا کہ جب ہم کیوبیک سے باہر آئے تو ہم سب سے کم عمر ٹیم تھے۔ ہمیں انڈر ڈاگ سمجھا جاتا تھا لیکن ہم نے کبھی کوئی گیم نہیں ہاری۔ \”لیکن یہ ریکارڈ اب بھی برقرار ہے: 1987 میں جب سے ہم نے یہ کیا تھا وہاں کوئی ٹیم ایسی نہیں ہے جو اس کپ کو جیتنے کے لئے ضابطے کے وقت میں ناقابل شکست رہی ہو۔\”

    اس کے بعد، پیرس نے اٹلانٹا میں پیشہ ورانہ چھوٹی لیگوں میں چھلانگ لگانے سے پہلے QMJHL میں Granby اور St-Jean-sur-Richelieu میں کوچنگ اسٹاپس کی، جہاں اس نے چیمپئن شپ جیتی۔ اس سے پہلے، وہ سینٹ لوئس بلیوز کے ساتھ NHL میں پہلے بلیک اسکاؤٹ بھی تھے۔

    تاریخ کی یادگاری

    ڈارٹ ماؤتھ میں ایک ناقابل یقین رات جب دو آل بلیک روسٹرز ایک ایسے کھیل میں آمنے سامنے ہوئے جس نے میری ٹائمز کی کلرڈ ہاکی لیگ کے افتتاحی میچ کی یادگاری تھی۔

    برادرز جان پیرس جونیئر اور پرسی پیرس بنچوں کے پیچھے تھے۔#ParisToToronto | #nsproud pic.twitter.com/6On2dVvHMW

    @HackeyNS

    وہ پیشہ ورانہ ہاکی میں پہلے سیاہ فام جنرل منیجر بھی تھے، جو کیوبیک جونیئر صفوں میں کردار ادا کرتے رہے اور سینٹرل ہاکی لیگ میں جارجیا میں مقیم ایک ناکارہ ٹیم میکن ہوو
    پی کے ساتھ۔

    پیرس اب بھی ہاکی میں شامل ہے، ایک بیرونی مشیر کے طور پر کام کر رہا ہے تاکہ NHL کے کچھ کھلاڑیوں کو ان کی کھیل کی کارکردگی میں مدد فراہم کی جا سکے۔

    ہاکی نووا اسکاٹیا میں تنوع اور شمولیت کی کرسی ڈین اسمتھ کا کہنا ہے کہ 2019 میں کھیل میں نسل پرستی اور امتیازی سلوک کو دیکھنے کے لیے ٹاسک فورس کی سفارشات میں سے ایک یہ تھی کہ ان لوگوں کے تعاون کو پہچاننے اور ان کو اجاگر کرنے کے طریقے تلاش کیے جائیں جن کی نمائندگی کم ہے۔

    \’اتنی معمولی اور اتنی عاجزی\’

    اسمتھ نے کہا کہ اس نے پیرس کے بارے میں جتنا زیادہ سیکھا، اتنا ہی وہ حیران ہوا کہ وہ پہلے سے ہال آف فیم میں نہیں تھا۔

    اسمتھ نے کہا، \”وہ بہت معمولی اور بہت عاجز ہے۔

    \”وہ ہاکی کے بارے میں بات کرنا پسند کرتا ہے، وہ اپنے تجربے کو میرے جیسے نوجوان جونیئر کوچز تک پہنچانا پسند کرتا ہے لیکن وہ کبھی بھی اپنے آپ کو نہیں بیچیں گے، اور میں سمجھتا ہوں کہ اب یہ ہمارا کام ہے – اس بات کو یقینی بنانا کہ اس کی تعریفیں اور ان کے کارناموں کو تسلیم کیا جائے۔ ہاکی کی اعلی ترین سطحوں سے۔\”

    ہاکی ہال آف فیم کے ایک اہلکار کا کہنا ہے کہ عوامی گذارشات کی آخری تاریخ 15 مارچ ہے۔ اسٹینلے کپ کے فائنل کے ختم ہونے کے بعد ایک سلیکشن کمیٹی امیدواروں پر غور کرنے کے لیے میٹنگ کرتی ہے۔ داخلے کے لیے 18 رکنی کمیٹی کا تین چوتھائی حصہ متفق ہونا ضروری ہے۔

    پیرس نے اعتراف کیا کہ وہ توجہ سے تھوڑا بے چین ہے۔ پیر کے روز، ہیلی فیکس موز ہیڈز گیم میں شرکت کے دوران انہیں کھڑے ہو کر داد دی گئی۔

    \”میں اس سے عاجز ہوں اور میں نووا اسکاٹیا اور میری ٹائمز کا شکریہ ادا کرتا ہوں، اور کینیڈا اور میں کہیں بھی گیا ہوں۔ میں نے یورپ اور امریکہ میں کوچنگ کی ہے… میں نے ہال آف میں جانے کے لیے کوچ نہیں کیا۔ شہرت، \”انہوں نے کہا۔ \”میں کوچ کرتا ہوں کیونکہ میں اسی سے لطف اندوز ہوتا ہوں، یہی میں کرتا ہوں۔\”

    درخواست پر منگل کی سہ پہر تک 2,300 دستخط جمع ہو چکے تھے۔





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