Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 2024
ADVT 
National

New Storyboard Honours Victims of Komagata Maru

Darpan News Desk City of Surrey, 07 Oct, 2020 05:45 AM
  • New Storyboard Honours Victims of Komagata Maru

Mayor and members of City Council unveiled a new heritage storyboard titled Remembering the Komagata Maru at a local Surrey park this week. Raj Singh Toor, representing the Descendants of the Komagata Maru Society, was also on hand for the unveiling. “This storyboard is an important reflection on a significant moment in Canadian history,” said Mayor Doug McCallum.

“Surrey is a diverse City, and we embrace people from all over the world. This permanent storyboard reinforces that we will learn from, and not forget the injustices of the past. Racism has no place in our City.” “We can’t undo the past, but we can move forward and leave a legacy for future generations by educating them about the past,” said Raj Singh Toor, Vice President of the Descendants of the Komagata Maru Society. “This new storyboard will help educate the community and remind us of Surrey’s diverse makeup. I hope that it will help in connecting British Columbians, Canadians and Surrey residents with their past, in order to build a more peaceful and tolerant tomorrow.”

In 2019, Council supported recommendations from the Surrey Heritage Advisory Commission to conduct research into the earliest South Asians in Surrey, deliver programming relevant to Surrey’s diverse communities, and to create a heritage storyboard reflecting on the Komagata Maru incident and systemic racism.

Each year, the Surrey Heritage Advisory Commission funds new heritage storyboards and other interpretive features throughout the City. This program ensures Surrey’s diverse history is accessible in locations city-wide.

To date, over 50 heritage storyboards exist across the City. The storyboard is located in R.A. Nicholson Park, 12140 75A Avenue, not far from the Komagata Maru mural and commemorative street signs on 75A Avenue. The storyboard is located on the pedestrian path just behind the Strawberry Hill Hall.

Photo courtesy of City of Surrey

MORE National ARTICLES

New program to protect farm workers from COVID-19

New program to protect farm workers from COVID-19
The program will subsidize farms' purchases of personal protective equipment and sanitary stations and it will help to cover extra costs in cases of any COVID-19 outbreaks.

New program to protect farm workers from COVID-19

Technology expert testifies at Fredericton trial

Technology expert testifies at Fredericton trial
Raymond, 50, is accused in the August 2018 shooting deaths of Donnie Robichaud, Bobbie Lee Wright and police constables Robb Costello and Sara Burns.

Technology expert testifies at Fredericton trial

Masks to be mandatory in Quebec high school

Masks to be mandatory in Quebec high school
The new rule enters into effect Thursday and will remain until at least Oct. 28 in high-alert regions such as Montreal and Quebec City, Education Minister Jean-Francois Roberge said.

Masks to be mandatory in Quebec high school

Greens slam opponents for byelection choice

Greens slam opponents for byelection choice
Annamie Paul became the new leader of the Green party Saturday after winning on the eighth ballot.

Greens slam opponents for byelection choice

N.B. Indigenous group seeks Aboriginal title

N.B. Indigenous group seeks Aboriginal title
Leaders from the Wolastoqey Nation gathered Monday at St. Anne's Point in Fredericton to announce their claim against the governments of New Brunswick and Canada.

N.B. Indigenous group seeks Aboriginal title

Canadian orphan child in Syria freed

Canadian orphan child in Syria freed
Her family in Toronto says they were told Sunday that the child, known as Amira, was now in the care of a Canadian consular official.

Canadian orphan child in Syria freed