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Mayor plans summit as Winnipeg works to shake ‘most racist’ label

Winnipeg Mayor Brian Bowman announces ONE: The Mayor’s National Summit on Racial Inclusion to be held at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights Sept. 17 and 18. Jordan Pearn / Global News

WINNIPEG – Mayor Brian Bowman is calling a race relations summit for next month as Winnipeg tries to shake off being dubbed the most racist city in Canada.

Mayor Brian Bowman said the race relations summit, to be held at the new Canadian Museum for Human Rights, will continue a much-needed discussion about racism.

“We do have a problem here,” Bowman said Tuesday. “Cities across our nation have the same problem — intolerance, ignorance, racism. We have a problem. It’s not Winnipeg’s alone but together we are ready to lead the nation in the battle to take on racism together.”

WATCH: Mayor Brian Bowman talks about ONE: The Mayor’s National Summit on Racial Inclusion

READ MORE: Mayor breaks down during response to Winnipeg racism article

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The summit comes as Winnipeg struggles with its image as an intolerant city, especially for aboriginal people.

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Winnipeg has come under a harsh spotlight numerous times. Brian Sinclair, an aboriginal double amputee, died during a 34-hour wait in a Winnipeg emergency room in 2008; some who saw him assumed he was drunk or homeless and in seeking shelter rather than medical care.

Some have called Winnipeg the epicentre for missing and murdered aboriginal women following the death of 15-year-old Tina Fontaine, whose body was pulled from the Red River wrapped in a bag last year.

Earlier this year, a Winnipeg high school teacher made national headlines when he ranted about aboriginal people on social media, accusing them of being lazy and seeking free money from non-aboriginal people.

WATCH: Raw interview with author of article calling Winnipeg a racist city

Bowman, who is Métis, tearfully promised to tackle such intolerance in January when Winnipeg was labelled the most racist city in Canada in a cover story in Maclean’s magazine. Since then, he has appointed an indigenous advisory council and said the two-day summit will bring people together to share ideas on how to fight racism.

“No single summit of leaders can or will end racism. We all know that,” Bowman said. “We need more than words to affect the most necessary change in Canada … but the summit is an attempt to begin that process.”

READ MORE: Winnipeg’s mayor vows to turn words into action to combat racism

The summit is to feature award-winning author Joseph Boyden and American civil rights speaker Gerald Durley.

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Education Minister James Allum said the province will help fund the summit and congratulated organizers for tackling the issue head-on.

“There are some in this community who don’t think we need to have this conversation. There are some who have said it’s not a problem, we shouldn’t talk about it,” Allum said. “(It’s) a conversation that needs to happen among all of us.”

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