Canadian Museum for Human Rights stereotyped Black men, report says

Laurelle Harris

Black men who work at the Canadian Museum for Human Rights are stereotyped and experience gendered racism that sexualizes and fetishizes them, says a new report from a lawyer hired to probe allegations of systemic discrimination at the national institution in Winnipeg.

The report written by lawyer Laurelle Harris, who has expertise in women’s and Black studies and mediation, paints a troubling picture of what employees say it’s like inside the museum.

“There is a pattern of gendered racism being perpetuated against racialized men within the museum and against Black men in particular, taking the form of sexualizing and fetishizing of Black men and the stereotyping of Black men as ‘dangerous’ and ‘predatory,'” Harris wrote.

Harris, who previously found racism was pervasive and systemic within the institution, said in her final report published last Monday, based on limited interviews with members of the the museum’s management team, that “management does not appear to have sufficient knowledge of foundational concepts about racism.”

There is some reluctance by senior executives to hold white members of management personally accountable for actions that help sustain systemic racism in the workplace, she said.

Harris, who was hired last year to investigate allegations of racism, homophobia and LGBT censorship at the national museum, said several Indigenous and racialized employees said racism there is commonplace and ongoing.

She gave an example of one racialized employee who said their co-workers felt that they had bad body odour, which is a common stereotype imposed on racialized people.

“In fact, the smell came from sweaters that were used as part of uniforms of other employees that had not been washed. The employee described as a humiliating experience having to bring the unwashed clothing to prove that their body was clean,” Harris wrote.

While the employee apologized, there wasn’t an acknowledgement of the use of a racist stereotype, she said.

Harris’s final, 81-page report covers everything from systemic racism to sexual harassment and censorship that kept LGBT, women’s rights and abortion material from being shown on tours.

Her report says she uncovered two additional sexual harassment allegations during her investigation.

In one case, a female employee complained about sexual harassment involving another colleague who was never interviewed by anyone from human resources.

Complaints mishandled

The manager to whom complainant reported the incident was one of two managers found to have mishandled harassment complaints by Indigenous and racialized women at the museum, the report said.

The museum’s failure to provide sexual harassment training to all staff before fall 2020 was a structural failure, Harris said.

“The inadequate treatment of sexual harassment claims within the museum by management as a whole has resulted in an erosion of trust on the part of staff that there will be fair, equitable and just processes for investigating harassment allegations in the workplace, including sexual harassment,” she wrote.