Canadian heroines: Who should appear on the country's bills?

BY FIONA BUCHANAN, POSTMEDIA NEWSJULY 28, 2013

http://www.canada.com/Canadian+heroines+should+appear+country+bills/8718496/story.html
Jane Austen's gentle gaze will soon be lining British wallets after the Bank of 
England responded to months of campaigning to keep at least one historical 
female figure on the U.K. currency.

Mark Carney, the bank's governor, announced last week that the famous author 
would replace Charles Darwin on the back of 10-pound notes. Currently, 
Elizabeth Fry is the only woman, apart from the Queen, depicted on the bills, 
but Fry will be replaced by a portrait of Winston Churchill in 2016. While 
female representation on British bills has drawn a lot of attention, the Bank 
of Canada's latest banknote series that is being rolled out have no notable 
women on the new bills with the exception of the Queen.

A tradition since 1969, the Queen graces the front side of $20 bills. Former 
prime ministers Wilfrid Laurier, John A. Macdonald, Mackenzie King and Robert 
Borden are featured on the front of $5, $10, $50 and $100 denominations. Unlike 
British currency, which features a historical figure on the back of each bill, 
the reverse of Canadian bills have never displayed portraits of important 
Canadians - male or female. Instead, the Bank of Canada has opted for 
landscapes, birds and representations of various Canadian accomplishments.

An image of the Ottawa statue of the famous five -  the group that fought for 
legal recognition of women as people in the 1920s - was the first and only 
representation of identifiable Canadians on the backs of bills. But the five 
women have since disappeared from the $50 bill, replaced by an icebreaker in 
the new plastic bills that are replacing older bills.

Veronica Strong-Boag, a historian and professor at the University of British 
Columbia, says that the next banknote series  - which are released every 15 
years - the Bank of Canada should aim to "beat the Brits" and recognize even 
more diversity on the bills than the British do.

"We don't want just white women or just women from certain classes," she said, 
adding that there is a wealth of important Canadians who could be considered 
for a spot on the bills who come from visible minority groups, First Nations 
communities and working classes.

Strong-Boag said, though it was difficult to choose, that if she had to choose 
one woman to appear on the reverse of one of Canada's bills, it would be 
Pauline Johnson, an aboriginal writer and poet best known for her poem, The 
Song my Paddle Sings. Describing Johnson as a "counter-weight" to a majority of 
white, male writers and poets at the time who were exploring Canadian identity 
through their works, Strong-Boag said Johnson was an important figure who 
challenged racism in the 1880s and 1890s.

"Here she is, a First Nations mixed-raced woman who defends Louis Riel and 
points out that the tribes are starving in the prairies."

Diane Watts, a researcher with REAL women of Canada, said Elisabeth Bruyère 
deserves a spot on Canadian currency based on her merit, not because of her 
gender. Bruyère was a nun in the 19thcentury who founded  the Sisters of 
Charity, set up the first hospital in Bytown (now the city of Ottawa) and the 
first bilingual school in Upper Canada in 1845. Watts suggested Bruyère 
"because of (her) pioneering influence in hospitals and education."

A lesser known Canadian hero, Maria Barile - an advocate for disabled women who 
recently died, would be a welcome addition to the country's bills according to 
Bonnie Brayton, the national executive director of DisAbled Women's Network 
Canada.

"She was one of the first people to look at breast-cancer screening for women 
with disabilities," said Brayton, who said Barile was an advocate for disabled 
women's health because she saw a number of her friends die from the disease 
because they were not properly screened. Barile was a founder of DAWN Canada 
who also made significant contributions to the prevention of violence against 
women with disabilities, said Brayton.

With the roll out of polymer banknotes expected to be complete this year, the 
Bank of Canada said it has not started looking at potential designs for the 
next series just yet.

"When the Bank of Canada designs a new series it consults with Canadians on 
what they would like to see on the new notes," said Alexandre Deslongchamps, 
senior media relations consultant for the bank.

"Ultimately, the decision on future designs will fall to the Governor and the 
Minister of Finance, who has final say over the designs."


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