The KKK in Ontario
ON DISPLAY / Local artist reveals the largely untold story of white supremacy groups in Canada
Chris Dupuis / Toronto / Wednesday, February 13, 2013
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Deanna Bowen was joking when she first proposed the KKK as the subject for an exhibition. Hot on the heels of the Art Gallery of York University (AGYU) group show Centre for Incidental Activisms (CIA), the gallery offered her a shot at a solo project. Bowen’s CIA piece explored Selma, Alabama, a small rural town known for bloody clashes during the civil rights movement. She was there researching a different project when curator Philip Monk proposed she do another piece about the city’s history.
 
“I was a smartass and suggested doing a project on the Klan, thinking they would balk,” laughs the Toronto-based artist. “They didn’t balk, and I was stuck with it. It’s a small picturesque country town full of black folks, and it reminded me of my great grandparents. From there, I started making associative connections between what I knew about it as a Klan town and the way my great grandparents walked the world.”
Toronto artist Deanna Bowen's latest exhibit brings together films, audio recordings, photographs, performance and textile works.
 
Hailing originally from Alabama, Bowen’s family gradually migrated to Canada via Texas and Oklahoma, finally crossing the border in 1911. Part of a complicated history of black migration from Southern states into Canada, their presence was the result of a mistake by the Canadian government. Needing to grow the population during the westward expansion of Alberta and Saskatchewan, then-prime minister Wilfred Laurier’s Liberal government placed ads in Southern newspapers, encouraging Americans to make a break for the Great White North.
 
“They didn’t do a lot research about which papers they were advertising in and ended up putting ads in a bunch of black papers,” Bowen says. “Once they realized their mistake, they started actively discouraging black migration to Canada by releasing false information to newspapers. But by that point there was already a growing population.”
 
As white Canadians became increasingly uncomfortable with their neighbours of colour, Klan groups began popping up. Far from being a detached historical survey, Bowen’s interest in the group had deeply personal resonance. Shortly after settling in Canada, her family’s home burned to the ground in a mysterious fire.
 
“This whole exhibition was focused on my ability to prove the Klan set the fire,” she says. “I never got close enough in my research to prove that. But I did learn a lot about the social environment that surrounded the fire.”
"There were cross burnings documented all over Ontario," says Deanna Bowen, referring to the KKK.
(Michael Maranda)
 
Under the moniker Invisible Empires, the sprawling exhibition brings together films, audio recordings, photographs, performance and textile works to reveal the largely untold story of the KKK’s migration north of the 49th parallel. Though Canadians usually associate white-robed men burning crosses with the Deep South, Bowen’s research uncovered a considerable history of the group’s activities here.
 
“The Klan was everywhere,” she says. “There were cross burnings documented all over Ontario, the last one being in North York in the mid-'80s. I think the way Canadians deal with it is to blow if off, saying it didn’t happen that much up here. We’re so caught up in denial that I think just about everything this show reveals is going to be shocking on some level.”  
 
 
    


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Reader Comments


 
I have a few questions (Dupuis didn’t)
First: “American’s”? “mid-‘80s”? Next: What was the allegedly false information released to newspapers? If true, isn’t that a historical scandal on the same continuum as the head tax and Japanese internment? Are cross-burnings synonymous with the Klan? In other words, can Bowen prove the actual Ku Klux Klan was active in Ontario? Why couldn’t you ask these questions yourself?
Joe Clark, Toronto ON
02/14/13 9:02 AM EST
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Active in Ontario
For Joe Clark and his prove the KKK was active in Ontario. One of the most iconic photo of the KKK standing around a cross was take in Kingston, Ontario on August 31, 1927. The picture was taken by John Boyd.
Bill N, Toronto On
02/14/13 7:35 PM EST
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Well, that’s a good start, Bill
...but the fact remains Bowen hasn’t documented her claims, nor did Dupuis ask her to. The business about the Canadian government’s spreading disinformation is a more surprising historical revelation than the idea that a few American or American-style racists operated here.
Joe Clark, Toronto ON
02/15/13 12:21 PM EST
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Just a Thought...
These questions are answered in the exhibition. Have you thought of going to see the show? It might be good for you to get away from the computer for a while. Staring at a screen eighteen hours a day seems to be giving you rage issues. Also, pick up Julian Sher's book "White Hoods: Canada's Ku Klux Klan". You can even order it on Amazon if leaving the house and interacting with real people instead of just screaming at them through your keyboard is too terrifying.
RA, Toronto ON
02/16/13 6:34 AM EST
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plenty of other white supremacist groups
Lets not forget the KKK isn't the only neo-nazi white supremacist group. While the KKK was largely a US organization we've had plenty of other similar home-grown groups all over Canada.
Rich, Toronto Ontario
02/17/13 3:03 AM EST
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What planet do these people live on?
The KKK is not only operate in Ontario,they operate all across Canada and so do many other of these kind of organizations.
Ben Johnson, Toronto Ontario
02/20/13 8:54 PM EST
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Try at the very start.
@Joe Clark: For one the KKK existed in Canada for a long time and yes I can dispute . There have been recorded KKK rallies in Nova Scotia as far back as the 1920s. Also, why I say from the start is during the American Civil War, British North America(what is Canada today) allied themselves with the Confederate States of America. It was known Confederate navy vessels did make port call in places like Halifax and Confederate agents where given permission to use British North America as a based of attack on the United States and operated on the border. Also, most people in British North America was convince the Confederate States of America was going to win the American Civilian War and this was why President Abraham Lincoln never liked British North America and wanted to evade it.
Ben Johnson, Toronto Ontario
02/20/13 9:08 PM EST
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Evidence, please
There's an entire television series dedicated to sasquatches, and another to proof of aliens having landed and affected ancient cultures. Doesn't make the existence of sasquatches a fact. EVIDENCE does. That's not a lot to ask for, what with so many academics and researchers prowling these pages. Evidence of racism, which is relatively easy to find, is not tantamount to evidence of the KKK operating in Ontario. A cross burning in and of itself, while symbolically disturbing, is not evidence of the KKK operating in Toronto. There are Islamists in Ontario who hate the West's liberalsm and plan terrorist acts (Toronto 18 and others) but that is not evidence of Al Qaeda operating in Ontario. These events are disturbing in and of themselves, and don't need to be tied to some greater racist conspiracy to be worth paying attention to. You do a disservice to the cause of fighting neo-Nazis and other scumbags if you don't provide evidence for your claims (I lost countless relatives in the Holocaust. I know the cost of ignoring hatred). Someone lighting a cross on fire in the 1980s is not evidence of anything other than one asshole with a grudge. Don't give it undue weight. There was a reason black people and escaped slaves came north. Life was not perfect, but it was decidedly better, and Canada even more so. Let's not lose sight of that fact, let's be proud of it, but let's face our own history even when it isn't what we want to know. But let's base that on evidence, not guilt.
Nadine Oberman, Toronto Ontario
02/25/13 1:07 AM EST
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Evidence of KKK?
I was told that the KKK did put burning crosses on catholic homesteads in the Ottawa valley. I knew the hate in my my own family and neighbours for catholics - so it is possible they existed. But its more likely these groups were Orange Lodge. The same hate exists today,somewhat,in Toronto but is usually seen in military type individuals.
Bryan Charlebois, Toronto Ontario
02/25/13 10:34 AM EST
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