VIOLA DESMOND NOVEMBER 8-1946
Seventy-three
years ago, on Friday, November 8- 1946 Viola Davis Desmond a 32-year-old
(July
6, 1914 – February 7, 1965) African Canadian businesswoman was arrested at the
Roseland Theatre in New Glasgow, Nova Scotia. She was harassed, injured,
arrested and incarcerated for resisting Nova Scotia’s white supremacist system.
She was found guilty of breaking the law and the guilty verdict remained in
place until April 15, 2010 when a posthumous pardon was granted. While Desmond
did not win her battle, she inspired others including her youngest sibling Wanda
Robson. Robson’s advocacy on her sister’s behalf has resulted in Desmond being
honoured with a Canadian postage stamp, her name on a ship and in 2018 her
image on the Canadian 10-dollar bill.
Murphy
Browne © Wednesday, November 14, 2012
VIOLA DESMOND NOVEMBER 8 - 1946
"On
behalf of the Nova Scotia government, I sincerely apologize to Mrs. Viola
Desmond’s family and to all African-Nova Scotians for the racial discrimination
she was subjected to by the justice system in November 1946. The arrest,
detainment, and conviction of Viola Desmond is an example in our history where
the law was used to perpetuate racism and racial segregation - this is contrary
to the values of Canadian society. We recognize today that the act for which
Viola Desmond was arrested, was an act of courage, not an offence."
Excerpt
from official apology by Nova Scotia Premier Darrell Dexter on April 15, 2010
On
November 8, 1946 Viola Davis Desmond a 32-year-old African Canadian
businesswoman was arrested at the Roseland Theatre in New Glasgow, Nova Scotia.
At 32 years old Viola Desmond was a successful entrepreneur and owner of a
beauty parlour and beauty school. This kind of business success was almost
unheard of for women in Canada at the time and especially for African Canadian
women. On November 8, 1946, Desmond was traveling on business from her Halifax,
Nova Scotia home when she experienced car trouble in New Glasgow, Nova Scotia.
She took her car to a garage and while the car was being repaired, she decided
to see a movie at the Roseland Theatre. She bought a ticket for the main floor
of the theatre, went in and sat down. She was unaware of the theatre’s policy
that the main floor was a “Whites only” seating area because unlike the blatant
White supremacist Jim Crow laws of the USA, there were no “Whites” and
“Colored” signs posted and she did not know that African Canadians were
relegated to the balcony. When Desmond was ordered to move, she replied that
she could not see from the balcony, that she had paid to sit on the main floor
and that she would not move. The manager left the theatre and came back with a
policeman. Together, the two burly white men dragged the slim, 4’ 11” Desmond
into the street, injuring her in the process. The White supremacist culture in
Canada is much more subtle than in the USA and Desmond was charged with
defrauding the government of one cent instead of the reality which was “sitting
in the White people’s section” of the cinema.
Desmond
spent the night in jail in the same block as male prisoners. Next morning, she
was tried and found guilty of tax evasion. She was found guilty of not having
paid the entertainment tax (one cent) that was the difference between the
“White” section and the “Colored” section of the cinema. The White woman who
sold her the ticket refused to sell her a ticket for the first floor which she
had requested but instead had sold her a ticket for the balcony. The sentence
was 30 days in jail or a fine of $20, plus $6 to the manager of the theatre,
one of the two men who had injured her as he dragged her out of the cinema the
night before. She paid the fine and then challenged the guilty verdict in the
Supreme Court of Nova Scotia. Desmond was supported in her struggle for justice
by fellow African Canadian and civil rights activist Carrie Best who publicized
the case in The Clarion newspaper. The Clarion was established in 1946 by Best
and was the first African Canadian owned and published newspaper in Nova
Scotia.
In
spite of their efforts and the support of the Nova Scotia Association for the Advancement
of Coloured People (NSAACP) the Supreme Court of Nova Scotia upheld the guilty
verdict. Desmond remained guilty of defrauding the government of 1 cent until
April 15, 2010 when she was granted a posthumous pardon. A press release from
the Nova Scotia Premiere’s office read in part: “The province has granted an
official apology and free pardon to the late Viola Desmond. Mrs. Desmond, of
Halifax, was an African Canadian wrongfully jailed and fined in 1946 for
sitting in the white peoples' section of a New Glasgow movie theatre. Mrs.
Desmond passed away in 1965. On the advice of the Executive Council, the
lieutenant governor has exercised the Royal Prerogative of Mercy to grant a
Free Pardon. A free pardon is based on innocence and recognizes that a conviction
was in error. A free pardon is an extraordinary remedy and is considered only
in the rarest of circumstances. This is the first time a free pardon has been
posthumously granted in Canada.” What the press release of Desmond’s eventual
pardon did not include was the fact that Desmond left Nova Scotia and
eventually settled in New York where she transitioned on February 7, 1965 just
5 months before her 51st birthday.
After
64 years, the government of Nova Scotia acknowledged what had been hinted at by
one of the judges who dismissed Desmond’s appeal to the Supreme Court of Nova
Scotia in April 1947. Justice William Hall is quoted in April 1947: “One
wonders if the manager of the theatre … was so zealous because of a bona fide
belief there had been an attempt to defraud the Province of Nova Scotia of the
sum of one cent, or was it a surreptitious endeavour to enforce a Jim Crow rule
by misuse of a public statute.” The White supremacist seating policy of the
Roseland Theatre was never acknowledged which is typical Canadian racism at
work; instead of signs indicating segregated seats in the theatre, tax laws
were used to disguise bona fide segregation. The Nova Scotia government at the
time insisted on arguing that the Viola Desmond case was a case of tax evasion.
Viola
Desmond’s case did not receive much publicity outside of Nova Scotia, unlike
the similar case of Rosa Parks to whom she is compared although her struggle
took place more than 9 years before Parks’ case. Since then Desmond’s story has
been told in several books including “Sister to Courage” published in 2010 by
Desmond’s younger sister Wanda Robson. Her story is also told in the “Long Road
to Justice - The Viola Desmond Story” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yI00i9BtsQ8
In
2012 Desmond was honoured with a Canadian postage stamp. In spite of this most
Canadians know more about Rosa Parks than they do about Viola Desmond. This is
due in part to the covert/undercover nature of Canada’s White supremacist
culture with the myth of a successful Canadian multiculturalism. The history
that is taught in the education system is Eurocentric not multicultural. We
know about the enslavement of Africans in the USA since it is well documented
but in Canada a discussion about the enslavement of Africans is mostly about
those who fled slavery in the USA and sought refuge in Canada. We do know the
names of some of the Africans who resisted their enslavement in Canada
including Chloe Cooley, Marie Joseph Angelique, Peggy Pompadour and others whose
names appear in “for sale” advertisements and bounty hunter type
advertisements. Some of those Africans enslaved in Canada fled south of the
border to states in the USA where slavery was abolished (e.g. Vermont 1777)
before slavery was abolished in Canada on August 1, 1834. The resistance of
enslaved Africans contributed significantly to the abolition of slavery. Viola
Desmond did not win her case but her fight encouraged successive generations to
continue the fight. In the 21st century the struggle continues on various
fronts and freedom fighters emerge regularly. Like Desmond they may not win
their battle but they inspire successive generations to continue the struggle.
Murphy
Browne © Wednesday, November 14, 2012
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