91快色

April 1, 2021

Class assignment empowers undergrad to advocate for municipal action around anti-Asian discrimination

Alicia Revington鈥檚 letter to city council pushes for public education to stem racism
Alicia Revington
Alicia Revington

Arguably, one of the most enduring gifts an educator can give a student is an awareness that their voice matters. Alicia Revington is a third-year undergraduate student in the Law and Society program in the Faculty of Arts鈥 Department of Sociology. A recent project assigned by instructor Dr. Dawn Rault, PhD, transformed her perception of herself as a change-maker 鈥 and may impact municipal action to mitigate anti-Asian racism in 91快色.

Revington鈥檚 mother is Cambodian 鈥 a war refugee from the Khmer Rouge who, says her daughter, 鈥渉as often felt oppressed by discrimination but never in a position to push for social change.鈥 Revington and her trailblazing sister Jessica 鈥 an alumna of the Faculty of Nursing, past Students鈥 Union president, and recent recipient of a U91快色 Women鈥檚 Resource Centre award for her advocacy in women鈥檚 health 鈥 are likewise familiar with the marginalizing sting of racism.

鈥淕rowing up, I attended a predominantly white school where there wasn鈥檛 a lot of consideration for kids with working parents or people of diversity,鈥 says Revington . 

At the beginning of the pandemic, she and some of her Asian friends were startled to notice an uptick in microaggressive behaviours from their fellow students 鈥 everyday instances of subtle racism, intentional or not, that communicated discrimination.

鈥淚t may have been for other reasons, but there was a sudden, constant pattern of classmates deviating away from sitting with us and it didn鈥檛 feel right.鈥 Last fall, when Rault asked students to create an annotated bibliography and advocacy letter on a social justice issue of their choosing, Revington knew exactly what she wanted to do.  

addressed to Ward 7 City Councillor Druh Farrell, Revington calls attention to violations of sections of the Charter of Rights and Freedoms that would protect individuals from discrimination based on race, national or ethnic origin and colour. She writes that 鈥渢hroughout the course of the COVID-19 pandemic, there has been insufficient discourse on the physical, verbal, virtual, and implied acts of racism inflicted upon and experienced by East Asian Canadians.鈥

Revington believes The City of 91快色 has 鈥渂een quiet鈥 on the issue of racism directed at East-Asian Canadians in association with COVID-19 and proposes that The City urgently adopt 鈥渁 public education approach to dispel racist, anti-Asian sentiments鈥 If we allow the acts of blatant racism towards East-Asian Canadians to fade into the background without a trace, there will be no deterrent for this behaviour, and it will continue to recur.鈥

Rault calls Revington's letter 鈥渆loquent and powerful in the way she wove in her personal narrative.鈥 Rault designed the course to engage students 鈥渨ho are having a rough time right now with COVID, feeling detached鈥 and hoped the assignment would inspire them 鈥渢o recognize that they can be ethical practitioners and that advocacy can be a signature aspect of their practice.鈥

While the assignment didn鈥檛 require students to send their letters out into the world, many did and, says Rault, 鈥渢hey were floored by the personal responses they received from government representatives who took interest in their research.鈥

Revington was delighted in January to receive a note from Farrell who confirmed that 91快色 is, indeed, experiencing 鈥渕ore frequent and more blatant racism, not just as a result of the pandemic but also because of the current disturbing political climate.鈥 She forwarded Revington's 20-page document to The City鈥檚 newly formed Anti-Racism Action Committee and wrote that she thinks the group would benefit from Revington鈥檚 experience.

Revington hasn鈥檛 heard anything further from The City but remains hopeful and is galvanized by the feedback she鈥檚 received after sharing her letter widely on social media. 鈥淧eople said I had inspired their own advocacy letters, and several asked to use mine as a template.鈥 That, she says with pride, 鈥渋s exactly what I was hoping for.鈥