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Graphic featuring the images of two Black Canadians and a stylized maple leaf Image courtesy Government of Canada
Community Campus Life

#BHM2024: Black History Month

01 February 2024
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Every February, people across Canada participate in Black History Month events and festivities that honour the legacy of Black people in Canada and their communities.

The 2024 theme for Black History Month is: “Black Excellence: A Heritage to Celebrate; a Future to Build”. This theme celebrates the rich past and present contributions and accomplishments of Black people in Canada, while aspiring to embrace new opportunities for the future.

International Decade for People of African Descent

The theme aligns with the 10th year of the International Decade for People of African Descent and recognizes that people of African descent represent a distinct group whose human rights must be promoted and protected. 

Throughout the month of February, the U of R will be hosting a number of interesting activities and events through which you can find out more about Black history and its impact on the history of Canada, Saskatchewan, and beyond. 

A Literary Journey: U of R’s Anti-Oppression Book Club

Hosted by the Archer Library, the Anti-Oppression Book Club will be celebrating Black voices for the month of February. The club will be reading Peace Oluwaseun Akintade’s Earth Skin. Meetings will be facilitated by Archer Librarian Mary Chipanshi. Akintade, the Saskatchewan Writers’ Guild Youth Poet Laurate for 2020-21, will also be on hand for a hybrid Meet-the-Author event on February 22, 2024. Contact mary.chipanshi@uregina.ca if you want to purchase a copy of Earth Skin and or meet the author at the February 22 event. 

African Canadian woman

Peace Oluwaseun Akintad, Saskatchewan Writers’ Guild Youth Poet Laurate for 2020-21 and author of Earth Skin, will be on hand for a hybrid Meet-the-Author event on Feb, 22 at the Archer Library. Photo credit: Carey Shaw

Black History by Black Authors: Blind Date with a Book 2024 Contest

Want to go on a blind date with a book, learn more about Black history by Black authors, and have the chance to win a one of three sets of books donated by the University of Regina Press and a signed copy of Peace Akintade’s Earth Skin?

  • Visit the display in the Archer Library to browse the wrapped books with personal ads. 
  • Choose one or two to check out as your Blind Date. 
  • Borrow the "Blind Date Books" at the Help Desk
  • Enter to WIN by completing the online "Rate your Date" form by February 21, 2024 (11:59 p.m.)

For more information, visit Archer Library in person or virtually

Celebrations of African-Canadian Black History

In Saskatchewan, Black History Month has become African-Canadian Black History Month. The new title is meant to be inclusive of all people of African descent and aligns with the 1978 UNESCO Declaration on Race and Racial Prejudice and was the brainchild of the Saskatchewan African-Canadian Heritage Museum (MCoS). Check out the MSoS website to discover their list of events. 

Love books? Sign up now to go a blind date with a book, learn about Black history from Black authors … and enter to win your very own Black history mini-library!

February is a great time to learn more about Black Canadian communities, their histories and stories, and how they continue to help shape our University, province, and our country.

About the University of Regina

2024 marks our 50th anniversary as an independent University (although our roots as Regina College date back more than a century!). As we celebrate our past, we work towards a future that is as limitless as the prairie horizon. We support the health and well-being of our 16,700 students and provide them with hands-on learning opportunities to develop career-ready graduates. Our research enterprise has grown to include 21 research centres and 12 Canada Research Chairs and brings in more than $51.2 million in funding annually. Our campuses are on Treaties 4 and 6 - the territories of the nêhiyawak, Anihšināpēk, Dakota, Lakota, and Nakoda peoples, and the homeland of the Michif/Métis nation. We seek to grow our relationships with Indigenous communities to build a more inclusive future.

Let’s go far, together.

Black History Month

First shared in 2023, U of R Cougars student-athletes talk about their hair in celebration of Black History month. Check out their stories in Black Hair. Let’s talk about it!