6 stories from the Canadian Museum for Human Rights - Action News
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6 stories from the Canadian Museum for Human Rights

With the Canadian Museum for Human Rights officially opening this weekend, CBC News shares six stories from inside and outside the museum's walls.
The Canadian Museum for Human Rights officially opened Friday in downtown Winnipeg. (Bert Savard/CBC)

With the Canadian Museum for Human Rights officially opening this weekend, CBC News shares six stories from inside and outside the museum's walls.

Click on the video players below to to watch Meagan Fiddler'sprofiles of Carmela Finkel, Mary Courchene, ChrisVogeland Richard North, and Ali Saeed.

We also talk to the sister of Viola Desmond, an early Canadian civil-rights activist, andMareshiaRucker, who helped end a tradition of segregation at her U.S. high school last year.

Carmela Finkel

Carmela Finkel says she's lucky to be alive todayto share her experience from the Holocaust at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights.

Finkel's family spent 20 months hiding in a bunker under a neighbour's house in Poland during the Second World War.

Carmela Finkel says because she spent 20 months in the dark during the Holocaust, the blinds in her Garden City home are always partly open these days. (Marcy Markusa/CBC)
She was nine years old when she went into hiding. She emerged when she was 11, unable to speak and use her muscles.

"It was a very traumatic part of my life,something I'll never forget," she said.

"But I feel very strongly that it's something that should be heard because we have to make sure that it doesn't happenI mean, it's happening all over the world."

EventuallyFinkeland her family fled to Germany, where they were greeted by American soldiers.

Mary Courchene

Mary Courchene says the 10 years she spent in a residential school were the worst 10 years of her life.

She was forced to attend Fort Alexander Indian Residential School No. 96starting at the age of five. She was not allowed to go home to her parents during the school year, even though herhome was just next door.

Mary Courchene's residential school story is not documented at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights, but galleries within the museum do include stories from former students and details about the Canadian government's apology to survivors. (CBC)
Her story is not documented at the Canadian Museum for Human Rightsbut galleries within the museum do include stories from former students and details about the Canadian government's apology to survivors.

Courchene said it's important for the public to hear the residential school stories that are in the museumbut said it could go further.

"They're shying away from saying that it was a genocide. I think it's up to us, up to the people, to say whether or not it was. And for me, it was," she said.

Museum officials have said it's not a court or an academic institution, so the term "genocide" is used only in relation to the five cases recognized by the Canadian government.

Chris Vogel and Richard North

Chris Vogel and Richard North are the first gay couple to try and legally marry in Canada.

Their marriage certificate, granted by the UnitarianUniversalistChurch of Winnipeg in 1974,was one of the first same-sex marriage certificates issued in Canada.

However, their unionwas not recognized by the province.

Chris Vogel and Rich North of Winnipeg have been married for four decades, but their marriage has not always been recognized. (CBC)
They launched a decades-long legal battle to challengemarriage laws and fight for same-sexspousal benefits.

North said he hopes others won't have to go through the struggle they've endured.

"Our marriage certificate, hopefully, is a beacon of hope. The museum will be part of the process of changing the way the world sees homosexuality," he said.

Their story, along with their marriage certificate,can be found in the museum's Canadian Journeys gallery.

Ali Saeed

Ali Saeed can tell you personally about terror and torture:during a period in the late1970s called the Ethiopian Red Terror,he was captured from his home in Ethiopia and tortured. He was hung upsidedown and his feet were whipped and cut.

Winnipegger Ali Saeed is telling his story in the human rights museum's Breaking the Silence gallery. (CBC)
When he was finally released, Saeed fled to Somalia, only to be captured and tortured again.

In total, he spent more than seven years in 11 different prisons.

Now living in Winnipeg, which he calls his safe haven, Saeed is telling his story in the human rights museum's Breaking the Silence gallery.

He said he's sharing his experience because millions of people are currently in captivity around the world.

"I have responsibilities to my comrades. They just keep the struggle and fight for the right of [women], fight for the freedom of speech, fight for the right to walk free and stand for justice," he said.

Viola Desmond

Nine years before Rosa Parks refused to give up her seat on a bus in Alabama, a Canadian woman named Viola Desmond stood up against racial segregation in a Nova Scotia movie theatre.

In 1946, Desmond was jailed and fined for refusing to give up her seat in the whites-only section of a New Glasgow, N.S., theatre.

Viola Desmond refused to leave the whites-only section of a Nova Scotia theatre in 1946.
Desmond, who owned a hairdressing business, fought unsuccessfully to appeal both her conviction and fine.

Her court battle started the dismantling of Nova Scotia's segregation laws and inspired civil rights activism in Canada.

"She was an educated, wonderful woman who thought that everybody deserved a chance in this world, and people should not be looked down upon because of the colour of their skin," said her sisterWanda Robson.

In 2010, Desmond received a posthumous pardon from the Nova Scotia government.

In 2012, she was featured on a commemorative stamp from Canada Post. And earlier this year, Nova Scotia observed a statutory holiday named after her.

Mareshia Rucker

In 2013, Mareshia Rucker helped organize the first integrated high school promin the U.S. state of Georgia.

Mareshia Rucker at her Georgia high school's first ever integrated prom in 2013. (Submitted by Mareshia Rucker)
That meantfor the first time in the school's history,black and white students could attend the promtogether.

Previously, separate proms were held for Caucasian students and African-American students.

"We only get to graduate once so we felt like it made sense for us to have prom together because we did everything else together," she told CBC News via Skype.

Rucker said it's an honour to see her school's achievement featured at the museum.