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KNOWLEDGE IS POWER – Toronto Caribbean Business Social Provides You With Tools for Success

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BY ALYSSA MAHADEO

For many, the start of a new year signifies unlimited potential. A fresh start, a new perspective, and the promise of new and exciting opportunities. How will you make this year different?

In recent times, more and more people are leaving their 9 to 5 jobs, and opting to take the more scenic route of entrepreneurship. Rather than working as an employee, an entrepreneur runs a small business and assumes all the risk and reward of a given business venture, idea, or goods or services offered for sale. Running your own business takes a lot of hard work and dedication. There is no time to sit back and relax, as everyday becomes a constant hustle.

Whether you’ve graduated from high school, or gone on to pursue a degree, there are no qualifications to be an entrepreneur. All you need is a business plan and finances to get started and bring a new idea to fruition.

For the past two years, the Toronto Caribbean has been host to one of the biggest events of the year connecting business owners with the community to provide exposure for their brand and services, while also providing the knowledge for continued success. In April 2016, the Toronto Caribbean Newspaper hosted the second annual Toronto Caribbean Business Expo, which included 75 small business vendors, 11 guest speakers and 2 very entertaining performances by the Tropicana Queens and WUSHU Project. Over 700 people were in attendance and media coverage included Rogers TV and The Asian Television Network.

The Toronto Caribbean Business Expo and Conference was organized to provide the Caribbean community a much-needed platform to present themselves to the public in a professionally organized business environment. They have allowed for over 135 vendors to exhibit at their event, creating a productive and engaging atmosphere where business owners could meet potential clients, and network with other entrepreneurs, while also enjoying a day filled with informational business advice and captivating island entertainment. In addition to the collection of vendors, renowned business professionals and entrepreneurs from within the community graced the stage speaking on business related topics, personal development, and what you need to know about how to brand yourself for success.

This year we have decided to try something a little different, rebranding the Expo to a Business Social, hoping to raise the bar and cater to the new and younger generation of business owners in a professional and educational forum. We are proud to create an event that is not exclusive only to the Caribbean community, but open to the public and everyone interested is invited and warmly welcome to attend.

This year our Business Social will be catering to the Millennial Generation, young people either in high school, headed into University or College or just plain and simple have no clue what’s next for them. After conducting focus groups with a panel of individuals that fall in and around the age of Millennials we have discovered that this generation is looking for answers based on questions they feel have been left unanswered during fundamental years of in school education pertaining to small business operation. Our focus feedback informed us that these individuals are looking for information, techniques and services teaching them to become their own brand, how to use their own creative personalities to start a passion project and get paid to do something they love. This year’s Social theme is STICK TO YOUR VISION and we have organized a line up of speakers to attend and share their stories with our audience. Each speaker address will complement our theme delivering knowledge to get people excited about materializing their new ideas and get the ball rolling on their own plans for the future.

This is an event that you won’t want to miss. On May 7th, 2017, the Toronto Caribbean Business Social will continue to lay the foundation for a professional platform where businesses can connect face to face with our community, as well as gain valuable knowledge to influence both personal and business growth for success. This year The Toronto Caribbean Business Social VIP Attendees will get exclusive access to this year’s speakers that include fun and relatable personalities with interesting and inspiring personal experiences in the pursuit of their dreams, and innovations in the world of business. At the 2017 Toronto Caribbean Business Social VIP attendees will hear from Canadian Hip-Hop Queen and Music Pioneer Michie Mee, Rapper, Record Producer, and Actor Maestro Fresh-Wes whose outstanding achievements have dubbed him Godfather of Canadian hip hop, Retail Magician and Founder and Owner of T by Daniel, Daniel Lewis, Best Selling Author Nelly James, Branding Specialist and TV and Radio Personality Priya Ali and much more!

International Comedians and Entrepreneurs Marc Trinidad and Jay Martin will host the Toronto Caribbean Business Social and perform with live musical entertainment by International R&B Sensation Carlos Morgan, local artist Chelsea Stewart, with music services provided by DJ Kevin.

General Admission to the Social is free, where you will gain access to browse the marketplace of vendors, network and gain possible leads as well as sample some of the tastiest cuisine from the Caribbean with a selection of food vendors providing their unique Caribbean inspired food creations. Various booths will be hosting service demonstrations, as well as entry into various prizes and giveaways.

VIP Admission is limited, and guests who purchase a VIP ticket will be granted access to the line-up of speakers and entertainment and performances throughout the day. VIP guest will also receive a Swag Bag, Catered Caribbean Buffet Style Lunch, Exclusive networking opportunities with other VIP attendees and speakers as well as entry into various giveaways including an Exclusive Personal Coaching Package with a Year’s worth of Advertising in the Toronto Caribbean Newspaper (Total package valued at over $5,000). VIP Tickets are currently on sale at an early bird price at $40, and prices will increase as the event draws near.

This year’s social on May 7th invites the men and women of today who were born to stand out and aren’t afraid to try new things to find their purpose and use their talents and skills and knowledge to make an impact in society. If you are someone searching for a new type of business knowledge, experience something remarkable that leaves an impression and inspires productivity. This event is Community oriented with citizens interested in inspiring change, uplifting the community and erasing social stigmas. These like-minded individuals are people interested in new innovative ideas, with unique and seamless solutions to make the business experience and enjoyable and prolific endeavor.

The Toronto Caribbean Business Social is invested in change and has invited community leaders and successful business owners to share their experience and practices with others to inspire a new generation of promising opportunity. If you are interested in discovering a new perspective, working on personal development, and hoping to do great things in the future this is the event for you!

The Toronto Caribbean Business Social will be held on Sunday May 7th, 2017 inside the Pearson Toronto Convention Center 2638 Steeles Ave East, in Brampton. For tickets please log onto eventbrite.ca/torontocaribbeanbusinesssocial or for information on marketplace vendor booths call 647-722- 6298. Tickets are going fast! Don’t miss out on this exciting opportunity to hear from the best of the best! If you are a young business owner or entrepreneur come out and discover all of the ways to take your passion and make it your paycheck!

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Bridging the gap in awareness and knowledge for those not familiar with the Carnival experience

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Photo provided by Paul Junor

BY PAUL JUNOR

The captivating and inspiring Carnival Arts costume showcase was held on Friday, April 12th, 2024, at the Student Learning Centre located at the Toronto Metropolitan University (TMU). It featured many student designers who were enrolled in the Fashion Arts program at TMU. The promotional material describes it as a showcase of creativity, storytelling, and student-curated costumes taking center stage with SugaCayne’s Innovation in Mas collection.

This is made possible through SugaCayne, which is one of the newest bands in the Toronto Caribbean Carnival launched in 2010. “We are honoured to fulfill our mission to create educational spaces and exhibitions for the carnival curious in collaboration with the TMU School of Fashion’s flagship event Mass Exodus.”

I spoke with bandleader Dwayne Harris of SugaCayne prior to the showcase. He was quite excited to be involved in this launch in partnership with TMU. He told me that he has previously worked with the Toronto Revellers prior to launching his own band with his wife. He is excited about this unique partnership as it serves “To bridge the gap in awareness and knowledge for those who may not be as familiar with the Carnival experience by creating educational spaces and exhibitions.”

The costumes designed by SugaCayne have been featured at different locations in the Greater Toronto Area. They include places such as: Toronto Carnival, Nike, Artwork TO, The Design Exchange, Holt Renfrew, The Bob Marley Experience, and the Royal Ontario Museum as well as other venues in the Greater Toronto Area.

Caron Phinney (Course Instructor) describes details about the Carnival Arts course at the Creative School at TMU. “It brings an innovative and critical learning experience like no other in North America. The course offers a contextual history of carnival and challenges students to upcycle materials and explore digital fabrication.” She describes the significance of the showcase as the catalyst of explorations and discoveries in the future. She notes, “The show is a space for students to express complex human stories through colourful and intricate design work that celebrates not just Caribbean tales, but also encourages students to learn from, explore, and embrace their own cultural background.”

The narrator of the showcase was Henry Gomez (aka King Cosmos). He is well known as a calypsonian in the Greater Toronto Area and regularly performs across Canada. He was introduced as a “Trinidadian and Tobagobian Canadian musician, actor, and educator. He is recognized as one of Canada’s best-known performers of Caribbean music and revered elder in the Caribbean Arts community.” He provided a good overview of the history of the Toronto Caribbean Carnival from its start in 1967 to the present. He outlines many of its features, the importance to Canada, and its future potential.

The names of the scenes that were presented in the showcase are:

  • Fantasy & Folklore
  • Natural Phenomenon
  • Flora & Fauna
  • Darkside

The showcase of the visually exciting and spectacularly appealing costumes provides a platform to bring the design process in the classroom. Students who were involved in the production of the Carnival Arts Show were enrolled in the transdisciplinary Live Event Supercourse. They participated directly in an environment that duplicated various aspects of the real-world. There is a collaborative approach with respect to different event production. Students participate in areas such as:

  • Management roles
  • Broadcast
  • Curation
  • Installation
  • Exhibition Design
  • Service Design
  • Space Design
  • Content Creation
  • Technical Direction
  • Promotion
  • Budgeting

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Under the radar; Manitoba principal apologizes for the distribution of sex education kits

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BY SIMONE J. SMITH

It’s disheartening to witness the trajectory of our society. There’s a palpable sense that something isn’t right, that a subtle but insidious indoctrination is taking place, particularly targeting our most vulnerable: the youth. Some believe that our youth are being fed narratives that shape their perceptions, often without them even realizing it.

In the midst of this, stories emerge quietly, slipping under the radar of public awareness. One such instance occurred recently, unbeknownst to many of us. This quiet alteration had far-reaching implications, with the power to shape the minds of future generations in ways we might not fully comprehend until it’s too late.

Last week, I received an email from Gregory Tomchyshyn (CitizenGO) with an update on a story that our esteemed Journalist Michael Thomas, had brought to our attention a few months ago.

In February of this year (2024), Janine Stephanie Penner shared that her son in grade 10 was given a “Gay porn graphic flip book at school as a method of learning how to use condoms and in addition, received 15 condoms and a wooden pecker for practice.”

The book distributed to students is called, “Who’s Got The Condom?” Both the front and back of the book include a sexually graphic image of what looks like an older male laying nude with a condom on, and a younger male, also nude, about to engage in a sex act.

Although the purpose of this book was to serve as a resource for condom education, the majority of the pages are blank of text, directions, or any other information. Instead, the flip book is filled with illustrations that merely depict a sequence of increasing motions in which the younger man masturbates the elder man. It then introduces a condom and flips to show the two male individuals having sex.

The Virden Collegiate Institute’s principal, Mark Keown, has issued an “apologetic” statement regarding the distribution of sex education kits that included: fake genitals, condoms, and pornographic flipbooks by the Sexuality Education Resource Centre (SERC) and Public Health. Principal Keown mentioned SERC was invited into the school to give the students in grades 9 and 10 the presentation.

They also were invited to place up a lunch hour display to distribute these kits to the grade 11 and 12 students, who “were not part of the presentations.”

In his statements to parents, which were also published online, Principal Keown speaks to students being able “To preview or take if they chose to” the pornographic “flip book ‘Who’s Got The Condom?'”

He said that originally, public health nurses who serve the school and community are the ones who have done those presentations. During the pandemic they became too busy with other duties. “That’s when the SERC staff was added in. They became those experts who came in and did the presentations for our students.”

He went on to say of the presenters, “They’re not necessarily certified teachers …as a teacher, we always try to deliver the factual neutral point and allow kids to have perspectives on that.”

This year was different. “I think in this scenario, there were some examples throughout the presentations where there was some personal bias, or personal perspectives that were not necessarily in the [curriculum].”

Principal Keown acknowledged his responsibility as school administrator and expressed concern over the presenter’s decision to make that material available in Virden Collegiate. “I wasn’t aware of that information being made available to our students over the lunch hour, and that’s where the apology letter went out. We should have screened that and been a part of that process, knowing that was information that was going to be made available for our kids.”

Given this backlash, the Fort la Boss Superintendent of Schools instructed all schools under its jurisdiction, including Virden Collegiate Institute, to “Postpone any further presentations by SERC until further notice and a review.”

While this apology and pause is good news, the victory is just one battle won against the much larger war against pornographic materials infiltrating our tax-funded schools. We must remain vigilant to ensure that these types of materials and presentations are no longer allowed to slip into schools under the radar.

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Do the UN Sustainable Development Goals help Africa? That is the question

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Photo Credit: MidjJourney 5.2

BY SIMONE J. SMITH

Throughout history, there have always been individuals who ascend to the higher echelons of cognitive prowess, where our brains undergo profound transformations in the acquisition of knowledge.

Progressing from mere understanding – the ability to interpret, summarize, and infer meaning – they delve into the realm of application, where concepts are wielded in real-world scenarios with astuteness. Advancing further, they embark on the path of analysis, dissecting ideas into their constituent parts and perceiving them through diverse lenses.

Synthesizing follows, as they weave together disparate threads of information to unveil overarching truths and patterns. Then comes evaluation, where judgments are forged through rigorous scrutiny and comparison against established criteria.

Finally, at the pinnacle stands creation, the zenith of Bloom’s Taxonomy, where elements are ingeniously fashioned into novel configurations, marking the culmination of intellectual mastery. In these higher states of cognition, the journey from understanding to creation represents a transcendence, a testament to the boundless potential of the human mind.

We are lucky to have a mind in our community that has reached profound levels of thinking; that individual is Elder Errol Gibbs. I received a thought-provoking Mini Position Paper titled “Unthinkable Thoughts!”

In the paper, he speaks to the fact that every country needs alliances, but they must be as equal partners, not as subordinates to self- appointed “great powers.” “Africa is far superior in its potential than any nation in the world to benefit from the new world—the Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR) (Industry 4.0), undergirded by AI digital resolution. Africa does not need the IMF, or the World Bank to keep suffocating her growth through a “debt trap,” he shares.

Elder Gibbs mentions that it is not theoretical, but scientific and a practical reality, undergirded by significant data gathering and analysis of Africa’s balance sheet. Africa might be cash-poor, but it is asset-rich. Africa has many advantages that the world seems unaware of. For instance:

Natural resources:                                    

For example, Africa has 40% of the world’s gold and up to 90% of its chromium and platinum. It also has the largest reserves of cobalt, diamonds, platinum, and uranium in the world. Africa holds 65% of the world’s arable land, and 10% of the planet’s internal renewable freshwater source.

Massive land mass:

For example, The African continent has a land area of 30.37 million sq. km (11.7 million sq. mi) — enough to fit the: United States, China, India, Japan, Mexico, and many European nations combined.

Massive youth population:

For example, the youth is Africa’s greatest asset. Africa’s population is projected to more than double to reach 2.5 billion by 2050, representing 25% of the world’s population. Almost one-half of the world’s youth will be from Africa, with a median age of 35.

Massive intellectual student base (national and internationally):

For example, in 2020, France hosted approximately 126,000 African students. China comes in second with roughly 81,500 students, while the United States comes in third with approximately 48,000 African students.

Massive medical practitioners (internationally):                                         

For example, approximately 65,000 African-born physicians and 70,000 African-born professional nurses worked overseas in a developed country in 2000. This represents about one-fifth of African-born physicians worldwide and about one-tenth of professional nurses. The fraction of health professionals abroad varies enormously across African countries, from 1% to over 70% according to the occupation and country.

It is at this point of the paper that Elder Gibbs asks some questions; does the UN Sustainable Development Goals help Africa focus on gaining autonomy in any of these seven sectors? Can they enable Africa to get out of the “debt trap?” Can they help Africa achieve the status of “industrialized nation,” and a “United States of Africa?”

According to Elder Gibbs, “Africa has the means to accomplish these goals as her primary responsibility. Africa needs to craft a unique set of 17 Sustainable Development Goals “apart” from the United Nations: Department of Economic and Social Affairs Sustainable Development Goals. Africa is burning through her: money, talent, and resources in a futile and endless effort of “stop-gap” management instead of building autonomously permanent infrastructure that she can afford.”

“I refer to the cornerstone of the vision for Africa as “Assets versus Liabilities—the Economic Factor: The Rise of Africa?” I prefer to share it with a panel of: African Leaders, academics, and researchers rather than in this paper. It requires a boardroom presentation in an academic setting.”

For my higher-level thinkers, what are your thoughts; do you believe that Africa needs to craft a unique set of 17 Sustainable Development Goals “apart” from the United Nations: Department of Economic and Social Affairs Sustainable Development Goals? If you would like to add to this discussion, feel free to reach out to Elder Gibbs at gibbse143@gmail.com. He will be able to field any questions you have and share the mini position paper with you.

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