A year of stigma: COVID-19 fear leads to shaming of racial, religious groups in Manitoba - Action News
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Manitoba

A year of stigma: COVID-19 fear leads to shaming of racial, religious groups in Manitoba

One year into the pandemic, numerous groups, often from marginalized communities, have been perceived as endangering public health, even if theyve done nothing wrong.

Hutterites, Chinese Manitobans, truckers, young people have all been blamed for spread of illness in past year

While public health officials have called on Manitobans to unite in the fight against COVID-19, there has been a tendency to shame people especially those from marginalized communities accused of spreading the illness. (Evan Mitsui/CBC)

Hutterites felt the glare of strangers when they ventured beyond their colonies.

It didn't matter if they had no trace of COVID-19. Their colonies were branded last summer as Manitoba's hotspot for virus infection. Some Hutterites were confronted by strangers while in public, or even refused service at businesses.

Hutterites Anabaptists wholive communally wondered if the public shaming would impact farming, their livelihood.

"If their community gets identified as having cases, it might impact their ability to get out and actually collect the harvest," said Ian Kleinsasser, a school teacher and historian from Crystal SpringHutterite Colony, south of Winnipeg.

"That was one of our biggest concerns around harvest time, that COVID would somehow put an end to our harvest."

The Hutterites were proactive, Kleinsasser said. They consulted with public healthand ordered alltheir drivers to stay in their combines when on the fields, no exceptions.

The communal way of life in places like Crystal Spring Hutterite Colony was upended by the arrival of the novel coronavirus. (Submitted by Ian Kleinsasser)

Thankfully, he said, they weren't impeded from working with their neighbours during harvest season.

In time, COVID-19 cases on colonies dropped and the stigma attached to Hutterites dissipated. Butthere was always another target.

One year into the pandemic, the public discourse on the global health crisis has focused on infections and deaths, lockdowns and closures, but it was also a year tarnished by stigmatization.

Treated like apariah

Numerous groups, often from marginalized communities, have been perceived as endangering public health, even if they've done nothing wrong.

"People were under tremendous amount of stress, and yes, I guess visible minorities are easy to blame at a time like this,"Kleinsasser said.

Public health officials tried to caution Manitobans against such behaviour, but at the same timevarioustargets to blame were presented, said Christopher Fries, a health sociologist at the University of Manitoba.

"Health promoters have had to walk this really strange line because they've had to actually define certain behaviours as unhealthy and therefore deviant.

"But the thing is ... I think [that] opens the door to stigmatization," he said.

A sign at the U.S.-Canada border crossing at Emerson, Man., on March 24, 2020. Truckers are among those who have been accused of spreading COVID-19, and some say they have been refused access to restrooms while doing their jobs. (Sean Kavanagh/CBC)

The targets of derisionhave changed rapidly.

First, it was people of Chinese descent. The novel coronavirus that causes COVID-19 was first found in China, which was reason enough for some people to level scorn.

Filipinos were targeted, too. Some of Manitoba's early coronavirus carriers flew in from the Philippines.

Truckers have been refused access to restrooms while doing their jobs.

Hutteritesthreatened to file a human rights complaint if the province didn't stop identifying the COVID-19 cases reported on their colonies, unless there wasa pressing health reason to do so.

In between, bar-hopping by young people acohort often employed in essential jobs wasblamed for spreading COVID-19early inthe pandemic's second wave. Some even disparaged the first people to die of the virus, suggesting "underlying medical conditions" were justification for their deaths.

In this pandemic, the tendency of people to scapegoat wasborne out of a feeling they weredoing their part by staying home, but others werenot, said RJLeland, an assistant professor of moral philosophy at the U of M.

"The more powerful the demands are for people to pitch in on behalf of the common good and the more serious the threat ... I think the more natural it is for people to be really frustrated when they see other folks not pitching in," Leland said.

Even so, he said it's no excuse for the few to denigrate an entire demographic of people.

Public display of racism

One driver missed that message in the pandemic's early days.

Hong Su remembers clearly thelarge sign in the back window of the blue truck driving down Winnipeg'sMain Streetlast March.

"F--k off China," it said.

"When I saw that slogan, I got very angry," said Su, a financial advisor. "I don't know why he put that sign up and showed it while driving in the city.

"I don't know how to stop him, I don't know how to talk to him, so I called the police," said Su, who gave police the driver's licence plate number.

It was traced to an out-of-town driver and thematter was referred to the RCMP. Theysay charges weren't laid because it appearsno crime was committed, though they said the sign wasa "poor choice."

Around the same time, he experienced racism up-close when he overheard a man at a vehicle repair shop condemning Chinese people for his woes, he said.

Manitoba Chief Provincial Public Health Officer Dr. Brent Roussinhas routinely cautioned against the dangers of such stigma, which he warned may prevent people from getting tested for COVID-19 or revealingtheir personal interactions to contact tracers.

Highlighting Hutterite cases 'clearly a mistake'

Psychologist Katherine Starzyk said the province's messaging could have gone further.

"There wasn't enough communication about how we should treat each other during the pandemic," the University of Manitoba professor said.

Some people are more at risk of contracting the virus through no fault of their own,Starzyksays.

COVID-19 flourishes in close quarters, such as the intergenerational homes newcomers tend to live in, or incommunalsettings like Hutterite colonies.Crowded and inadequate housing on reserves has also been blamed for high case numbers in some First Nations communities in Manitoba.

"I think the government could just talk a little bit about giving people the benefit of the doubt across these groups," Starzyk said. "We may look different in how we dress or how we live our lives, but fundamentally we're not that different."

Public health officials occasionally erred by revealing too much information about certain groups of people, she says.

Katherine Starzyk, an associate professor in psychology at the University of Manitoba, says public health officials could offer better communication on how people should treat each other during the pandemic. (Submitted by Katherine Starzyk)

In the case of Hutterites, the province should have identified an area of geographic concern, rather than singling out a religious minority.

The province stopped attributing new cases to Hutterite colonies after the threat of a human rights complaint.

"Highlighting those groups was clearly a mistake," she said. "It just makes those people a target."

Michelle Driedger, a U of M professor in community health sciences who specializes in public health communication, says public healthmessaging hasn't been intended to shame, but the messageswere twisted by others.

The government undermined the efforts of itsown health officials by shaming alleged rule breakers, such as the premier naming a small-town hotel fined for an alleged breach of public health orders, she said.

"If you break the public health rules, there's a good chance you might get your name mentioned on TV," Premier Brian Pallister said last November.

The business Pallister named is planning to appeal the fine.

However, the public health department hasnavigated the tension between citizens'rights to know and an individual's right to privacy deftly, Driedger said.

Health officials owned up to their mistakes, such as revealing the school name, grade, classroom and bus route of the first student to contract COVID-19, Driedger said. Facing pushback, the province reneged on its promise to reveal such detailed information of student infections.

The first known positive COVID-19 case in Manitoba's school system was a student at Churchill High School in Winnipeg. Health officials revealed too much information about that case, says one expert, but made changes to avoid that in later cases. (Holly Caruk/CBC)

There's "a tension that public health constantly navigates" between providing information that issufficiently transparent and notviolatingprivacy, Driedger said.

"Not naming individuals or having certain levels of protectionthat's one way of helping to offset some of that."

Earlier this month, Roussin acknowledged the risk of stigmatization while divulging COVID-19 cases by demographic group, which showed people of colour were more likely to be infected.

The numbers alone don't provide context, he said.There are systemic factors at play, such as high-risk jobs and inadequate housing.

"This is very important information to collect," Roussin said, but "we all knew that we had to be very clear that this didn't further stigmatize groups."

WATCH | Stigma a challenge when releasing race-based data on COVID-19:

Dr. Brent Roussin says stigma a challenge when releasing race-based data on COVID-19

4 years ago
Duration 0:55
Dr. Brent Roussin, Manitoba's chief public health officer, said Monday race-based data on COVID-19 is important to gather and share, but stressed that systemic factors, not race, are what make individuals more susceptible.

One Winnipeg grocery store wore the repercussions of stigmatization for months.

Business at Gill's Supermarket on Keewatin Street dropped precipitously last summer when a rumour circulated that severalemployees got COVID-19.

It was completely false,but the rumour hung on the grocery like a scarlet letter. Sales fell by 30 per cent.

Some of owner Jagjit Gill's regulars shopped elsewhere formonths.

"People started saying that it's been too long since they've been to the store," Gill said.

Jagjit Gill, owner of Gill's Supermarket, said his Keewatin Street store saw decreased business for three months after a false rumour that several of his employees had COVID-19. (Ian Froese/CBC)

The return of hiscustomers coincided with the pandemic's second wave, when Manitoba was overwhelmed with sometimes hundreds of new COVID-19 cases a day.

The spike was remarkable it took seven months for Manitoba to record its first 3,000 cases,and just over two weeks to record the next 3,000.

Gill said some of his customersnow either know somebody with the virus, or were infected themselves.

"Everybody was scared back then, but if we compare to nownow, nobody cares about it," he said.

Vaccine refusers could be targeted:ethicist

The stigma may have dissipated in some corners, but U of M ethicistLeland expects it to re-emerge as vaccinations ramp up and some will bereluctant or refuse the shot.

"You're going to see a lot of these same dynamics play out," hesaid.

It doesn't have to be that way, he said. People getting inoculated should treat others with respect, rather than ostracizing those who don't.

"Whatever you think of their beliefs and how rational or irrational they are, treating those people like garbage isn't going to make them more likely to consider getting that shot."

The Hutteritesresponded to stigma they faced last year by helping other groups in need.

After hearing a plea for volunteers, Kleinsasser got in touch with management at the Saul and Claribel Simkin Centre, a Winnipeg personal care home for Jewish seniors, which was hit bya COVID-19 outbreak.

That led to a group ofHutterites working apartin their own homes, dueto pandemic restrictions sewing500 new isolation gowns.

Several Hutterite colonies banded together, while apart, to sew isolation gowns for a personal care home in Winnipeg that was in need. (Submitted by Ian Kleinsasser)

The gesture was a way for Hutterites to give back, Kleinsasser said.

"I kept thinking that when you're overwhelmed by darkness, the best way to overcome it is to put on a light."

With files from Karen Pauls