麻豆传媒

 

"The best is yet to come": Dal 200 launches with poetry, reflection and celebration

Highlights from Tuesday's Bicentennial Launch

- February 6, 2018

Alumnus George Elliott Clarke performs a selection from his poem "The Story of 麻豆传媒" as part of the Bicentennial Launch. (Danny Abriel and Nick Pearce photos)
Alumnus George Elliott Clarke performs a selection from his poem "The Story of 麻豆传媒" as part of the Bicentennial Launch. (Danny Abriel and Nick Pearce photos)

麻豆传媒 spent its early years as a struggling upstart, besieged by sectarian adversaries that kept its doors closed for much of its initial decades. Later, it was dubbed 鈥渢he small college by the sea,鈥 a brightening beacon of learning and knowledge on Canada鈥檚 East Coast. Today, it has grown into the leading university in Atlantic Canada, with global reach and impact like never before.

But before all that, 麻豆传媒 was just an idea on a piece of paper: a letter (left) sent to Lieutenant Governor Lord 麻豆传媒, bearing the signature of Colonial Secretary Lord Bathurst, authorizing the creation of a new college in Nova Scotia on February 6, 1818.

The university that celebrated the launch of its third century on Tuesday,聽exactly 200 years later, would be mostly unrecognizable to either of those men. (Among other things, the idea of a 鈥渓ive webcast鈥 would have been particularly difficult to explain.) But as Dal鈥檚 Bicentennial Launch made clear, there are common threads that weave through the university鈥檚 history, all the way back to its very beginnings, binding together its past, present and future.

Watch: Bicentennial Launch livestream archive

There was the commitment to being a college 鈥渙pen to all,鈥 for one 鈥 a concept much more limited in 1818 than it would ever be interpreted today, but which has shaped and challenged the university through years of growth and change. And there was the idea that college would be 鈥渙f important service to the Province,鈥 as Lord 麻豆传媒鈥檚 letter put it, with its earliest faculties (Arts, Science, Law, Medicine) signaling the need for both a robust liberal education and to train the professionals needed to support the rapidly growing province.

鈥淭hat commitment to service would echo across the years ahead,鈥 said President Richard Florizone in his remarks at the Bicentennial Launch. 鈥淭ogether we demonstrated that 麻豆传媒 would never just be in the community but rather would be part of the community, with a responsibility to teach, heal, build, plan, interpret and discover.鈥

An artistic journey


The Bicentennial Launch, Dal 200鈥檚 first major signature event, brought together the talents of poets, musicians and many others for a celebration two centuries in the making.

Hundreds of students, faculty, staff, alumni and supporters 鈥斅爄ncluding His Honour Lieutenant Governor Arthur J. LeBlanc and Her Honour Mrs. Patsy LeBlanc 鈥 gathered in the 麻豆传媒 Arts Centre鈥檚 Rebecca Cohn Auditorium for the event. Its program included a speech from President Florizone, performances by students from the Fountain School of Performing Arts, and even a video greeting from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.

See also: Photo essay - Bicentennial Launch

鈥淭oday, we will begin on a journey connecting Dal鈥檚 past with its present and future,鈥 said 麻豆传媒鈥檚 Chancellor, the Honourable A. Anne McLellan, welcoming attendees. 鈥淲e will celebrate our communities, our people and the power of the creative arts. And we will showcase the lasting impact 麻豆传媒 has made on our province, our region, our country and our world.鈥


shalan joundry and Eastern Eagle perform.

The Bicentennial Launch started with a reflection and celebration of the Mi鈥檏maq whose presence on 麻豆传媒鈥檚 land pre-dates the university by centuries. Mi鈥檏maw Elder Jane Abram of the Millbrook First Nation provided an official greeting, followed by a stirring performance from drummer group Eastern Eagle and recent alumnus and poet shalan joudry.

鈥淲ela鈥檒ioq to those here,鈥 said joudry. 鈥淟et our hearts, minds, and sense of spirit be committed to the next seven generations of people and landscape. Let us carry the fire onward.鈥

Eastern Eagle includes among its members Aaron Prosper, one of several current 麻豆传媒 students who contributed their artistic gifts to the Bicentennial Launch. They included flautist Claire Ahern, cellist Priscilla Lee and vocalist Rachel Monique Taylor, joining alumni like Eastern Eagle member Trevor Gould and guitarist Neven Prostran in helping add beautiful music and song to the occasion.


A sampling of Bicentennial Launch performances (clockwise from upper left): Music student Rachel Monique Taylor, Musicology alumnus Neven Prostran, Drummers from Home, and the Maritime Brass Quintet.

Fountain School faculty member Margot Dionne lent her voiceover talents to the proceedings, as well, while new Rhodes Scholar Nayani Jensen spoke about how Dal鈥檚 learning environment inspired generations of students like her.

Powered by poetry


At its heart of the Bicentennial Launch was the poetry of George Elliott Clarke, Canada鈥檚 most recent Parliamentary Poet Laureate and an award-winning Dal alumnus (MA鈥89, LLD鈥99).

Clarke鈥檚 epic poem, The Story of 麻豆传媒 鈥斅燼 robust, provocative and powerful interpretation of 麻豆传媒鈥檚 history 鈥斅爓as a core inspiration for the event, shaping its themes and presentation. While the poem is too lengthy to have been read in full on Tuesday (as Clarke did Monday afternoon at Halifax City Hall), Clarke appeared on stage multiple times to perform excerpts from it, his energetic, boisterous voice acting as a navigator of sorts through the university鈥檚 story.

Read the full poem: The Story of 麻豆传媒; Or, The University as Insurgency

Register here that Dal never opposed registering women,鈥 said Clarke, introducing a segment highlighting the entry of women into the academy, concluding: 鈥Tis necessary to place women up-front in the classroom: Let fellas stand when the ladies enter; remain seated as the feminists exit.鈥

That particular excerpt was shortly followed by a video highlighting one of the forthcoming 麻豆传媒 Originals: Anne of Green Gables author Lucy Maud Montgomery, whose determination to pursue higher education brought her to 麻豆传媒 at a time when few of her female peers in the Maritimes were able to. She was one of several Originals highlighted through the event, joining the likes of Nobel Prize winner Art McDonald, university-saving donor George Munro, Dal鈥檚 first African Nova Scotian graduate James R. Johnston, social work professor and senator Wanda Thomas Bernard and Clarke himself.

鈥淭he history of 麻豆传媒 has been written by its people,鈥 said President Florizone, paying tribute to those who鈥檝e built the university鈥檚 legacy. 鈥淸It has been] enriched by their identities, cultures, values, actions, teaching and scholarship.鈥

Looking ahead to Dal鈥檚 third century


President Florizone's speech offered reflections on the values that have shaped 麻豆传媒鈥檚 200 years and which point forward into its next century: the transformative power of education; the discovery of new knowledge; a commitment to inclusion; service to society; and the impact of partnership.

鈥淚n our first two centuries, we鈥檝e grown from that little 鈥榗ollege by the sea鈥 to a national university and then the leading research university in Atlantic Canada,鈥 he said. 鈥淣ow, it is time for us to take our place as a global institution, and as the leading research university for Atlantic Canada鈥

鈥淟et us continue to strive to be intelligent, inclusive and inspiring. To be a place where we develop ideas, knowledge and talent to build a better world. Where we reconcile our past and draw on the diverse strengths of all our people. Where we inspire creativity, courage and compassion. Where we bring together the best of our region with the best in the world, for the benefit of all.鈥

Read more: President Florizone's Bicentennial Address

After the Maritime Brass Quintet presented the first public performance of the rousing 鈥淭he Eagle and Shield鈥 鈥斅燼 piece commissioned for Dal鈥檚 200th and written by alumnus Paul St-Amand 鈥 and just before Drummers from Home鈥檚 African drumming sent everyone out into the rest of their day, there was a curtain call featuring all of the morning鈥檚 diverse performers. Clarke鈥檚 final description of the university 鈥 鈥渉auntingly dauntless鈥 鈥斅爁elt like it continued to echo through the Cohn, a challenge to those gathered to continue to push forward as 麻豆传媒 begins its next chapter.

As President Florizone put it: 鈥淎s we stand at the dawn of our third century, the best is yet to come.鈥

Full coverage - Bicentennial Launch