Close X
Monday, January 27, 2025
ADVT 
National

Ottawa Professor Who Died In Ethiopia Plane Crash Remembered For Public Outreach

The Canadian Press, 11 Mar, 2019 08:47 PM

    Ottawa professor Pius Adesanmi, one of the 18 Canadians killed in Sunday's Ethiopian Airlines crash, is being remembered as a public intellectual whose outreach to Africans across the globe shaped the way Canada is seen abroad.


    A colleague says Adesanmi, as director of Carleton University's Institute of African Studies, deepened the academic discipline within Canada and elevated the school's program to international renown.


    Nduka Otiono, a fellow Carleton professor and Adesanmi's friend of 25 years, says the Nigerian-born professor amplified his activism to his "cult following" on social media and by building relationships on the ground in Africa.


    Otiono says it's difficult to imagine the depth of the devastation being felt across the globe in the wake of his colleague's tragic death.


    A Nigerian representative to African Union's Economic, Social and Cultural Council told The Associated Press that Adesanmi was on his way to a meeting in Nairobi, Kenya, when the jet went down Sunday shortly after takeoff from Addis Ababa airport, killing all 157 aboard.


    Adesanmi, who was also a professor in Carleton's Department of English Language and Literature, won the inaugural Penguin Prize for African non-fiction writing in 2010.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    CP Rail Says Freight Train Derailed Near Field, B.C., No Injuries

    CP Rail Says Freight Train Derailed Near Field, B.C., No Injuries
    FIELD, B.C. — Clean-up work is under way at the scene of a Canadian Pacific Railway train derailment just east of Field, B.C., near the Alberta boundary.

    CP Rail Says Freight Train Derailed Near Field, B.C., No Injuries

    Extreme Risk At Top Of North American Public Avalanche Danger Scale

    Extreme Risk At Top Of North American Public Avalanche Danger Scale
    BANFF, Alta. — The North American public avalanche danger scale is determined by the likelihood, size and distribution of avalanches.

    Extreme Risk At Top Of North American Public Avalanche Danger Scale

    B.C. 'Adventure' Traveller Detained In Syria, Missing For More Than One Month

    B.C. 'Adventure' Traveller Detained In Syria, Missing For More Than One Month
    A British Columbia man who went to Syria seeking adventure has been detained in the war-ravaged country, and Canada's foreign ministry says there is little it can do to help him.

    B.C. 'Adventure' Traveller Detained In Syria, Missing For More Than One Month

    22-Year-Old Man Dies Following Ski Hill Accident In Quebec's Lac-Saint-Jean Region

    22-Year-Old Man Dies Following Ski Hill Accident In Quebec's Lac-Saint-Jean Region
    MONTREAL — A 22-year-old man is dead following a fall at a ski hill in Quebec's Lac-Saint-Jean region.    

    22-Year-Old Man Dies Following Ski Hill Accident In Quebec's Lac-Saint-Jean Region

    Hot Potato: Food Guide Makeover Creates Debate As Health Canada Prepares Release

    Hot Potato: Food Guide Makeover Creates Debate As Health Canada Prepares Release
    An overhaul of the Canada Food Guide is set to be released soon, a highly anticipated makeover that will do away with the rainbow visual many Canadians associate with the dietary guide commonly used in hospitals and daycares.  

    Hot Potato: Food Guide Makeover Creates Debate As Health Canada Prepares Release

    Radio-Canada Accused Of Racism For Parody Mocking PM Trudeau's India Trip

    Called "Bye bye," the show draws millions of viewers New Year's Eve and is considered the television event of the holiday season in Quebec.

    Radio-Canada Accused Of Racism For Parody Mocking PM Trudeau's India Trip