Celebrating Canadian icons
The Canadian Club of Morrisburg and District welcomed Past Governor of Toastmasters International and a relative of Viola Desmond, civil rights icon, Norma Domey. Domey spoke about her famous relative who will replace Sir John A. McDonald on the front of the $10.00 banknote.     Courtesy Vanden Bosch photo

HALIFAX – Wanda Robson, the sister of social justice defender Viola Desmond, who appears on Canada’s new $10 bank note, was visibly emotional as the note’s design was revealed on March 8, 2018, International Women’s Day. “I’ll never forget this day—I can’t, it’s written in history,” said Robson.

Finance Minister Bill Morneau, Bank of Canada Governor Stephen S. Poloz, and Dr. John Young, President and CEO of the Canadian Museum for Human Rights, unveiled the note in a ceremony at the Halifax Public Library.

Once the note enters circulation in late 2018, it will mark the first time that an iconic Canadian woman is portrayed on a regularly circulating Bank of Canada note.

Desmond was selected by Minister Morneau after an open call to Canadians to nominate iconic Canadian women who could appear on the redesigned $10 bank note. A successful Black Nova Scotian businesswoman, Desmond defiantly refused to leave a Whites-only area of a movie theatre in 1946 and was subsequently jailed, convicted and fined. Her court case is one of the first known legal challenges against racial segregation brought forth by a Black woman in Canada.

“Viola’s is just one of millions of stories from women who have helped shape, build and influence our country,” said Minister Morneau. “But it’s an important story, because it shows that standing up for what we believe, whether it’s on the step of Parliament Hill or in a movie theatre in New Glasgow, Nova Scotia, can make our country and the world a better place for future generations.”

The new $10 note is also the first vertically-oriented note issued by the Bank, which allows for a more prominent image of Viola Desmond and differentiates it from the current polymer notes. The back of the note features images and symbols that depict Canada’s ongoing pursuit of rights and freedoms, including the Canadian Museum for Human Rights—the first museum in the world dedicated solely to human rights; an eagle feather—representing the ongoing journey toward recognizing rights and freedoms for Indigenous peoples in Canada; and an excerpt from the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.

“Respect, reflection, dialogue—these are the values that Canadians aspire to, and this new note will help teach Canadians, indeed anyone who sees one of these bank note, about the ongoing story of human rights in Canada,” said Dr. Young.

Visit bankofcanada.ca to learn more about the design and security features of Canada’s currency and follow the Bank on Twitter (@bankofcanada) for the latest news about Canadian bank notes.

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