A kid soars in a balloon above the cane fields-- a picture of escape that lands, unbelievably, in Halifax, Nova Scotia. Fiction gives us the sensation; history provides us the frame. Halifax when provisioned the Caribbean sugar economy with timber and fish, then became a waypoint to dignity: a safe haven for flexibility candidates running away in the Underground Railroad. On the harbour's edge, Africville tells a harder reality-- community, faith, and music forged under pressure, later on removed, still kept in mind. From that lineage came Barbadian migrations that altered Canada's culture and politics: believe Austin Clarke's prose, Cameron Bailey's cinema, and Senator Anne Cools's public service-- doors opened, stories expanded. The Atlantic bridge runs both methods: rum and sugar north, fish and lumber south, and across everything, individuals carrying memory.
Enjoy the clip-- then see the sources, context, and lived history.
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