Retreat for BIPOC community planned for Birchtown - Action News
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Nova Scotia

Retreat for BIPOC community planned for Birchtown

Three hectaresof waterfront woodland in Shelburne County, N.S., are set to become a retreat for Black, Indigenous and people of colour (BIPOC).

Buy Black Birchtown hopes to open member-run retreat in June

The organizers behind Buy Black Birchtown are working to create a retreat and learning centre that will be open for bookings this summer. (Jessika Hepburn)

In Shelburne County, a few minutes from the Black Loyalist Heritage Centre, sits three hectaresof waterfront woodland set to become a retreat for Black, Indigenous and people of colour (BIPOC).

The area was once home to Nova Scotia's largest settlement of Black Loyalists, who fled northin the late 1700swith the promise ofrefuge, and instead facedracism and poor living conditions.

The organizers of an initiative called Buy Black Birchtown hope to create a place that honours that history.

"It is very empowering because we're taking over, I guess, where our ancestors have left off and we're creating the space for the next generation," Shekara Grant told CBC's Information Morning this week.

She's the co-founder of the Change is Brewing Collective, which israising money to offer people memberships in the retreat who can't afford it. The idea is that members will be able tohost workshops, events and other gatherings that will be designed for, and by, people of colour.

These kinds of spaces are hard to find right now, Grant said.

"I think the concept of safe space may be difficult for, you know, white people to understand because we live in a world that kind of works for them. but when we go out, it doesn't always feel the same for us," she said.

Opening planned for June

The property, which includes multiple buildings,is set to open inJune, with plans to develop a larger retreatfacility in the future.

Jessika Hepburn recently bought the landand runs the Biscuit Eater Cafe and Books in Mahone Bay, N.S. She said the idea to create a place of rest and refugespecifically for the BIPOC community became especially urgent last summer.

"The death of George Floyd really sparked what many people think is a racial reckoning, but for our communities it was truly exhausting withcountless requests for free labour and so much from our workplaces, from our communities," she said.

The retreat is needed in Nova Scotia, Hepburnsaid,given the racism people of colour can face in many public places, includinga family who was threatened with a noose at aChester Basin beach last summer.

Shekara Grant is the co-founder of the Change is Brewing Collective, which has bought a membership in the retreat. (Brian Limoyo)

There are also times when places that are supposed to be welcoming to diverse communitiesaretargeted and attacked, Grant said.

Last month, a Black Lives Matter sign at a Baptist church in Bedford was vandalized. In 2006, the Black Loyalist Heritage Society's office wasset on fire, destroying many documents and photographs.

Jessika Hepburn has bought the property in Shelburne County that includes more than three hectares of forest and multiple homes. (Brian Limoyo)

Grant said the Birchtown retreat would not only be a safe place to gather, but an environment where peoplefrom many different backgroundscan learn from one another.

"I think it'sreally nice to recharge, but also to talk to people from other communities that have similar experiences that you might not know unless you go outside of your own community," she said.

Hepburn hopes the organizers of Buy Black Birchtown can work with the Black Loyalist Heritage Centre tohost people who want to visit the centre and learn more about Black Nova Scotian history.

"The idea would be to see the Black Diaspora coming to Birchtown, participating in the centre ... showing a very strong Black presence in Shelburne County," she said.

For more stories about the experiences of Black Canadians from anti-Black racism to success stories within the Black community check out Being Black in Canada, a CBC project Black Canadians can be proud of. You can read more stories here.

A banner of upturned fists, with the words 'Being Black in Canada'.
(CBC)

With files from CBC's Information Morning