Nine Nights and Forty Days: Grief, Trinidadian Style
/After 40 years in Toronto, Septembre Anderson's relatives still grieve using Trinidadian mourning rituals. She talks about the death of her uncle in Nine Nights and Forty Days.
Read MoreAfter 40 years in Toronto, Septembre Anderson's relatives still grieve using Trinidadian mourning rituals. She talks about the death of her uncle in Nine Nights and Forty Days.
Read MoreSeptembre Anderson wonders if racial profiling by police will always be part of Toronto.
Read MoreIf you’re looking for a soft and fuzzy feel good play to ease you into a discussion of racism, then Korean-American playwright Young Jean Lee’s The Shipment isn't for you. While “dissect[ing] what it means to be [B]lack in America,” Lee pulls no punches, spares no feelings and handles no one with kid gloves.
Read MoreSeptembre Anderson has the type of hair that is most feared: Black hair. Her hair is a revolutionary that refuses to be colonized.
Read MoreThe Wellness Issue