Breaking the black stereotype: CBC Manitoba chat tackles myths - Action News
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Manitoba

Breaking the black stereotype: CBC Manitoba chat tackles myths

What does it mean to be a black man walking down the streets of Winnipeg? What presumptions are made about women of colour? Ismaila Alfa and guests explore the stereotypes that exist.

CBC Asks: What does it mean to be a black man in Winnipeg? What presumptions are made about women of colour?

Christian rapper Rob Wilson, a.k.a. Fresh IE, on black stereotyping: 'I wish I could say things have changed, but they haven't.' (Submitted by Rob Wilson)

Rob Wilson is a black man who drives a nice car.

And that, he says, was enough to subject him to a curious traffic check while on the road in south Winnipeg.

"I asked police why I'm being pulled over, and they said 'it's a routine stop'" Wilson says. "I was pulled over, again, for nothing."

Wilson, aka Fresh IE a Grammy and Juno nominated Christian rapper first made headlines in 2008 when police stopped him in his car, pulled their weapons and accused him of driving a stolen car. (He wasn't.)

The most recent experience in 2019, he says, was a stark reminder that when it comes to racial profiling especially when it comes to people of colour there's still work that needs to be done.

CBC Asks: What are the black stereotypes in Manitoba and how do we break them?

5 years ago
Duration 39:53
CBCs Ismaila Alfa hosts a panel discussion on the stereotypes that continue to exist in this province. Panellists include Melissa Cote, Larry Strachan, Leisha Strachan and Rob Wilson.

Melissa Cote echoes that sentiment. The Winnipeg mother says since she was a teenager, she's been sexualised by "older white men" who target girls and women of colour .

"I get it all the time," Cote says.

Other stereotypes are more covert.

Leisha Strachan, now an associate professor at the University of Manitoba and a sports psychology consultant,was a world champion baton twirler but when people learned she was athletic, the assumption was always the same.

"I used to get asked, 'Why baton? Why not track and field?'"

Leisha Strachan, an associate professor at the University of Manitoba, urges black youth to 'find out what their gifts are, and not be stopped by what society expects of them.' (Submitted by Leisha Strachan)

Larry Strachan grew up loving and playing classical music and yet "people assumed that I would be an expert rapper as well."

Wilson, Cote, Strachan and Strachan joined CBC'sIsmaila Alfa for alive streamdiscussion on Feb. 26,looking at black stereotypes in Manitoba and how to break them.

The special waspart of the CBC's ongoing coverage of Black History Month.

CBC host Ismaila Alfa on breaking the black stereotypes: what does it mean to be a black man in Winnipeg? (Donna Carreiro/CBC)