John Moran recognized with Honourary Blocker Award by UBC Athletics and Recreation

Photo of Sarah Barclay, Senior Director of Development & Alumni Engagement for Athletics and Recreation and award recipient John Moran, Digital Archivist at UBC Archives

Photo: Sarah Barclay, Senior Director of Development & Alumni Engagement for Athletics and Recreation and award recipient John Moran, Digital Archivist at UBC Archives.

Congratulations to John Moran, Digital Archivist at UBC Archives, who was awarded the Honourary Blocker Award at the annual Big Block Awards held by the UBC Athletics and Recreation at the Queen Elizabeth Theatre on April 2, 2025.

For more than 80 years, the Big Block Club has honoured the best that UBC Athletics has to offer. More than 9,000 varsity letter winners have been inducted into the esteemed club, and hundreds of remarkable student-athletes have been recognized for their outstanding achievements.

The Honourary Blocker Award was given to Moran in recognition of UBC Archives’ “exceptional commitment to the archives and history of our varsity sport programs” through the creation of the UBC Department of Athletics & Recreation fonds.

“This project was my first major project as a new archivist,” says Moran, noting that the project was truly a team effort that would not have been possible without the expertise and support of University Archivist Erwin Wodarczak, Department of Athletics historian Fred Hume, and Candice Bjur, Archives Clerk at UBC Archives.

“Over the course of two years, I compiled the finding aid, with a special focus on documenting the information Fred [Humes] provided, so that former Thunderbirds and their descendants could locate images of themselves, teammates, or family members,” says Moran.

Learn more about the UBC Department of Athletics & Recreation fonds.

The Journey of Birds: A New Art Exhibit at the Asian Centre Foyer

Date: April 5 to April 30, 2025
Location: Asian Centre (1871 West Mall) (map)
Hours: During Asian Library open hours (see hours)

Visit the Asian Centre foyer this month to view The Journey of Birds, a new art exhibit presented by UBC graduate student Mengkai Zhang.

This exhibit showcases five paintings and a series of accompanying stories, centered on Mengkai’s personal exploration of identity as a Chinese art teacher studying abroad in Canada. The text and images represent his journey of evolving into a more-than-a/r/tographer (beyond the roles of artist, researcher, and teacher) while overcoming the identity crisis.

Mengkai Zhang is currently completing his master’s degree in art education at UBC and will begin his doctoral studies at the University of Victoria this fall. His research interests include a/r/tography, more-than-human studies, storytelling as research, Taoism, and self-identity among Chinese teacher-overseas students. He is a two-time recipient of the Jeanette Andrews Scholarship (2024 and 2025) and will be presenting his paper at the American Educational Research Association’s annual meeting in Denver this April.

Read the Artist Statement here.

New Books at the Asian Library (March 2025)

DS832.7 K6 G87 2024
グローバルな物語の時代と歴史表象 : 「PACHINKO パチンコ」が紡ぐ植民地主義の記憶 / 編著玄武岩, 金敬黙, 李美淑, 松井理恵 ; 著テッサ・モーリス=スズキ [and 15 others] / 東京都新宿区 : 青弓社, 2024

DS832.7 K6 K328 2024
「帰れ」ではなく「ともに」 : 川崎「祖国へ帰れは差別」裁判とわたしたち / 石橋学, 板垣竜太, 神原元, 崔江以子, 師岡康子著 / 東京 : 大月書店, 2024

HC462.95 C459 2024
地政学的リスクと日本経済 : 新たな冷戦時代における構造改革 / 福田慎一編 / 東京 : 東京大学出版会, 2024

HV1448 J3 M87 2024
婦人相談員物語 : その証言から女たちの歴史を紡ぐ / 村本邦子, 松本周子著 / 東京 : 国書刊行会, 2024

JC571 M668 2024
多様性とエンパワメント : 競争から共生へ・つながるいのち / 森田ゆり / 大阪市 : 解放出版社, 2024

LA1317 O43 2024
「反・東大」の思想史 / 尾原宏之 / 東京 : 株式会社新潮社, 2024

ND1059 K23 S55 2024
北斎と数学 / 新藤茂著 / 東京都豊島区 : 東京美術, 2024

PL747.8 C58 2024
中間小說とは何だったのか : 戦後の小說雑誌と読者から問う / 小嶋洋輔, 高橋孝次, 西田一豊, 牧野悠 / 東京 : 文学通信, 2024

PL763.87 T54 D65 2024
慟哭 3・11 : 東日本大震災文学館からのメッセージ / 日本近代文学館編 / 東京 : 青土社, 2024

PL872.5 A9276 W38 2024
私の最後の羊が死んだ / 河崎秋子 / 東京 : 小学館, 2024

PL958.8 O83 2024
〈弱さ〉から読み解く韓国現代文学 / 小山内園子 / 東京 : NHK 出版, 2024

Z463.3 T75 M368 2024
蔦屋重三郎 : 江戶の反骨メディア王 / 増田晶文 / 東京 : 株式会社新潮社, 2024

BL2747.8 S39 2024
세속주의 를 묻는다 : 종교학적 읽기 / 최 정화 엮음 / 서울시 : 모시는 사람들, 2024

DS910.2 J3 K557 2024
한일 국교 정상화 교섭 의 정치사 / 김 은정 / 서울시 : 선인, 2024

DS920.8 K59 2024
본 헌터 : 어느 인류 학자 의 한국 전쟁 유골 추적기 /  고 경태 지음 / 서울시 : (주) 한겨레 엔, 2024

DS923.23 Y58 2024
한국 문화 의 음란 한 판타지 : 문화 는 어떻게 현실 에서 도망 가는가? / 이 택광 / 서울시 : Yeondoo, 2024

GB545 K6 K56 2024
우리 가 몰랐던 백두 대간 : 백두 대간 교육론 / 김 우선, 김 광선, 신 인수, 박 경이, 차 성욱, 이 문희 지음 / 서울시 : 도트북, 2024

HC79 T4 S2848 2024
사회 생태 전환 의 정치 / 임 운택, 김 민정, 강 민형 엮음 ; 글쓴이 구 준모 [and nine others] / 경기도 성남시 : 2th, 2024

HQ1765.5 Y432 2024
페미니즘 에서 디케이즘 으로 : 인간 의 확장 / 이 정호 저자 / 서울시 : 지식 과 감성, 2024

HV551.5 K6 C436 2024
참사 는 골목 에 머물지 않는다 : 이태원 참사 가족들 이 길 위 에 새겨 온 730일 의 이야기 / 10.29 이태원 참사 작가 기록단 씀 / 경기도 파주시 : 창비, 2024

JQ1729 A795 C48 2024
정당 없는 민주주의 는 없다 : 한국 정치, 현실 을 넘어 미래 로 / 곽 진영, 전 진영, 김 진주, 정 회옥, 조 원빈, 고 선규 지음 / 경기도 파주시 : 21세기 북스, 2024

ML342.5 K836 2024
근대 음악 문화 유산 창가집 연구 / 민 경찬 [and five others] 저 / 경기도 파주시 : 경인 문화사, 2024

ND1069 K567 K56 2024
그리고 새긴 이, 김 상유 : 100년 의 시간, 작품 회고집 / 김 상유, 김 상봉 / 서울 특별시 : I Rich Korea, 2024

PL965.7 S46 C46 2024
한국 현대 소설 작가 의 서울 사용법 : 장편 소설 을 중심 으로 / 조 미숙 / 서울시 : 역락, 2024

PL992.26 H8 Z78 2024
모란봉 에 모란꽃 피면 평양 가겠네 / 이 대환 / 경기도 파주시 : 아시아, 2024

QV77.7 C46 2024
21세기 환각제 혁명 / 지은이 조 성권 / 서울시 : 지식 과 감성, 2024

Z6958 K6 K864 2024
근현대 제주 잡지 해제집 : 1900-1980 / 기획 국립 군산 대학교 인문 도시 센터 ; 지은이 김 기성 [and nine others] / 전라북도 전주시 : 신아 출판사, 2024

DS798 A3 O986 2024
花雨丹书 : 西藏档案馆所藏蒙古文书信档案研究与译注 / 乌云毕力格, 乌兰巴根著 / 北京市 : 社会科学文献出版社, 2024

FC3850 C5 L585 2024
振振公族 : 近代北美司徒氏家族的传奇故事 / (加)刘静著 / 桂林市 : 广西师范大学出版社, 2024

HG187 C62 G836 2023
民国时期广东财政稅收研究 / 柯伟明, 杨鸿编著 / 广州 : 广东人民出版社, 2023

HQ519 Q5825 2024
重绘你的生命底色 : 来自萨提亚的成长启发 / 邱丽娃著 / 北京 : 世界图书出版公司, 2024

ND1043.4 W364 2024
元末明初的书画世界 : 以个案研究为基础 / 王菡薇, 刘品编著 / 北京 : 商务印书馆, 2024

NK1483.A1 W46 2024
纹样之美 : 中国传统经典纹样速查手册 / 红糖美学著 / 北京市 : 北京大学出版社, 2024

PL2275 W65 Z436 2024
近代女性文学视域下女性观念转型研究 / 赵思奇著 / 北京 : 中国社会科学出版社, 2024

PL2899 H282 Z453 2024
自言自语 / 史铁生著 / 北京市 : 人民文学出版社, 2024

PL2928 H82 W623 2024
我胆小如鼠 / 余华著 / 南京市 : 江苏凤凰文艺出版社, 2024

PL2958 I1446 C486 2024
春云十三展 / 史梦甄著 / 桂林 : 漓江出版社, 2024

PL2965 X56 B825 2024
不理想的妻子 / 王欣 著 / 北京市 : 人民文学出版社, 2024

PS153.C45 H429 2024
身份认同模式的演变 : 二代美籍华裔生命写作研究 / 贺秀明著 / 北京 : 外语教学与研究出版社, 2024

HD9696.2 U62 G374 2024
कंप्यूटर किंग बिल गेट्स की बायोग्राफी / प्रशांत गुप्ता / नई दिल्ली : प्रभात प्रकाशन, 2024

PK2099.19 A73 S56 2024
सिंदूरी धूप : कहानी संग्रह / अशोक दर्द / नई दिल्ली : वनिका पब्लिकेशन्स, 2024

PK2099.22 A97 E33166 2024
ਏ… ਹੰਸਾ : ਨਾਵਲ / ਲੇਖਿਕਾ, ਡਾ. ਗਾਰਗੀ ; ਅਨੁਵਾਦਕ, ਪਰਮਜੀਤ ਪਰਮ / ਚੰਡੀਗੜ੍ਹ : ਤਰਲੋਚਨ ਪਬਲਿਸ਼ਰਜ਼, 2024

PK2099.22 U68 S26 2024
सांझ ढले गगन तले : कहानी संग्रह / रीता गुप्ता / नई दिल्ली : वनिका पब्लिकेशन्स, 2024

PK2099.25 A536 P73 2024
प्रतिहारी : विचित्र जीवो का रहस्य / अभिनव जैन / जैसलमेर, राजस्थान : फ्लाइड्रीम्स पब्लिकेशन्स, फरवरी 2024

PK2099.4 I93759 E53 2024
एक फरिश्ता ऐसा देखा / प्रेमसागर तिवारी / नई दिल्ली : प्रभात प्रकाशन, 2024

PK2659 S25684 R36 2024
ਰਾਣੀ ਖਾਂ ਦੇ ਜੀਜੇ / ਗੁਰਪ੍ਰੀਤ ਸਹਿਜੀ / ਮੋਹਾਲੀ, (ਪੰਜਾਬ), [India] : ਊੜਾ ਪਬਲੀਕੇਸ਼ਨ, 2024

PK2659.S374 Z82 2024
ਵੇਖਿਆ, ਜਾਣਿਆ ਸੋਹਣ ਸਿੰਘ ਸੀਤਲ : (ਜੀਵਨੀ ਵਾਰਤਕ) / ਵਰਿਆਮ ਸਿੰਘ ਸੰਧੂ / Samana, Patiala : Sangam Publications, 2024

PK2659 S55 P734166 2024
ਪ੍ਰਕਾਸਿਨਾ : ਇਕ ਬੋਧੀ ਰਾਜਕੁਮਾਰੀ / ਪ੍ਰੋ. ਪੂਰਨ ਸਿੰਘ ; ਅਨੁਵਾਦ ਤਰੁਨਦੀਪ ਸਿੰਘ / Sangrur : Rethink Books, 2024

PZ90.P3 T45 2024
ਆਓ! ਗੁਰਦੁਆਰੇ ਚੱਲੀਏ! / ਤੇਜਿੰਦਰ ਕੌਰ, ਪਵਨਜੋਤ ਕੌਰ, ਜਪਨੀਤ ਕੌਰ ; ਚਿੱਤਰਕਲਾ, ਭੁਪਿੰਦਰ ਸਿੰਘ ਆਹਲੂਵਾਲੀਆ / [Ludhiana] : ਲਾਹੌਰ ਬੁਕਸ, 2024

Applications open for UBC Library’s EDI Scholars-in-Residence Program 2025/2026

Applications open EDI Scholars-in-Residence Program 2025/2026 Deadline to apply June 30, 2025, 12 p.m. PT

Applications are now open to join the 2025/2026 Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion (EDI) Scholars-in-Residence Program, an initiative by UBC Library and the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre.

The EDI Scholars-in-Residence Program is open to individuals who hold degrees in any discipline. Scholars will a spend a residency at the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre to participate in public engagement with a clear impact on equity, diversity, and inclusion (EDI). The Scholar will have an established record of research or activities related to EDI. Applications from academic, governmental, policy, and arts sectors are invited.

Each residency will be four (4) months in duration, and will take place either during Term One (September to December) or Term Two (January to April). Scholars will hold one public event during their residency as well as informal one-on-one conversations with students, staff and faculty, either in-person or virtually. Public lectures presented through the EDI Scholar-in-Residence program take place in the Antonio and Marissa Peña Learning and Events Room in IKBLC, with support from the Peña Fund.

Apply online by June 30, 2025 (12 p.m. PT).

For more information on program eligibility and benefits, please visit the program website.

 

Apply now

 

Leon J. Eekman Materials

This blog post is part of RBSC’s blog series spotlighting items in the Phil Lind Klondike Gold Rush Collection and the Wallace B. and Madeline H. Chung Collection.

While the Wallace B. and Madeline H. Chung collection is best known for its large Canadian Pacific and Chinese immigration holdings, it also contains a wide variety of miscellaneous photos and materials from across Western Canada and Pacific Northwest. These can often allow us insight into lives that indicate the differences of experience between immigrant communities in BC, particularly between European colonists and other groups. Today we will be discussing the life of a Belgian-Canadian whose materials are found in the Chung Collection, Leon Eekman.

[Portrait of Leo J. Eekman] RBSC-ARC-1679-CC-PH-11113. Chung Collection. 1909. B&W Photograph


Leon (Leondart, Leendert, Leonard) John (Jan, Jean, Jeens) Eekman was born on December 12, 1880, in Brussels Belgium, likely of Flemish background. He was from a large middle-class family with at least four brothers and one sister. When he was young he served as a sergeant in the infantry stationed in Liège, Belgium, before arriving in Canada around 1905, first to Manitoba and then settling in Victoria, British Columbia. A well-educated man with fluency in English, French, German, Flemish, conversational Dutch, and Walloon, Eekman soon found work as a language tutor. As a result he quickly became acquainted with colonial society, including the family of Chinese merchant Loo Gee Wing, subject of a previous blog. By 1908 he was also working as a surveyor and draftsman, well-established enough to employ a Chinese domestic servant, Ah Guan 關亞均, which was common among the colonial well-to-do.

This young man was a likely cook, gardener, and/or servant to Eekman or Holdcroft Family [Portrait of 關亞均, Ah Gwan] RBSC-ARC-1679-CC-PH-11088. Chung Collection. 1908. B&W Photograph


His movements over the next few years suggest a complex transatlantic life; in 1909, he returned to Europe via New York City aboard the SS Oceanic, to attend the 1910 Exposition Universelle et Internationale de Bruxelles re-entering Canada in September 1910. He was at that point recorded as a tourist with no stated intention of permanent residence. Despite this, he made his way back to Victoria, where he had lived before. The differences between his easy crossing of borders and those of Chinese Canadians during a time of tightening exclusion are a noteworthy comparison here.

 

Front of Leon J Eekman’s 1910 Brussels International Exposition Pass. [Exposition Universelle & Internationale de Bruxelles 1910] RBSC-ARC-1679-CC-PH-11108. Chung Collection. 1910. B&W Photograph on board


Shortly after his return, Eekman married Marion Holdcroft on November 10, 1910, in Victoria, after courting her in previous years. The wedding took place at the home of his in-laws, and through this union, he became connected to the Holdcroft family, a well-respected colonial lineage with English roots. Marion’s father, John Holdcroft, was the Assistant Surveyor of the City of Victoria, a role that Leon himself would later hold. Marion’s maternal relatives had been English merchants in Brussels, later starting a toy company. In their early years of marriage, Leon and Marion lived with her parents at 1268 Walnut Street, and Leon continued his work as a language tutor and surveyor. Around 1912, he became a naturalized British subject, further solidifying his ties to Canada. During this period the ability of Asian diaspora communities in BC to naturalize had been slowly restricted, likewise showing a diverging experience of legal belonging.

 

Leon (left) and likely Walter (right) Eekman surveying. [Leo J. Eekman] RBSC-ARC-1679-CC-PH-11078. Chung Collection. 16 Jul. 1907. B&W Photograph


When World War I broke out, Leon enlisted with the Gordon Highlanders (50th Reg.) He later served in the Canadian Army Medical Corps (CAMC), working under Colonel Murray McLaren at a field hospital in Étaples, France. His brother, Arie Eekman, also served in the same conflict in the Netherlands Army as a Militia Sergeant of the First Corp. Motor Service in Delft. Leon’s role involved the grueling and dangerous task of transporting wounded soldiers from the battlefield to medical facilities. His service was not without hardship; in October 1915, he contracted tuberculosis, which would shape the remainder of his service.

Leon Eekman in uniform, Nov 1914. [Portrait of Leo J. Eekman] RBSC-ARC-1679-CC-PH-11080. Chung Collection. 21 Nov . 1914. B&W Photographic Postcard


Fearing anti-German sentiment in Victoria impacting his family due to his surname, Eekman wrote a public letter to the Victoria Daily Times from the front in June 1915, proclaiming his British loyalty and that of his family. By May 1916, his health had deteriorated to the point that he was medically discharged and sent to the Esquimalt Convalescent Home, followed by six months at the Tranquille Sanatorium. Still wanting to serve, Eekman was frustrated in his attempt to serve as a translator; he suspected discrimination due to his German-sounding name. His military discharge became permanent in July 1918, and he returned to civilian life in Victoria.

Leon (right) and colleague in front of Victoria City Hall. [Building and plumbing inspector and assistant building and plumbing inspector] RBSC-ARC-1679-CC-PH-11092. Chung Collection. 1930. B&W Photograph


After the war, the Eekman family settled at 1303 Hillside Avenue. Leon petitioned the city to restore his pre-war position in the survey department, which he had left upon enlisting. This is a position that would have been excluded to non-whites by statute during this period. Over time, he became a provincial draftsman and later served as the Assistant Building Inspector for the City of Victoria. Beyond his professional life, he was deeply involved in religious and civic activities. A passionate evangelical Christian, he was active in the Shantymen’s Association, ministering to working men in remote (particularly mountain and coastal areas) of British Columbia. His religious fervor extended into his participation in the Canadian Protestant League, a controversial anti-Catholic organization. He frequently wrote newspaper columns and letters to the editor, engaging in heated theological debates, often garnering response letters about his all-to-frequent contributions.

Leon (2nd from left) and other mission workers of the Shantyman’s Association, Lake Cowichan BC, 1925. [Ye must be born again truck] RBSC-ARC-1679-CC-PH-11095. Chung Collection. 1925. B&W Photograph


During World War II, Eekman was appointed Acting Belgian Consul for Vancouver Island and Haida Gwaii, where he assisted in the registration and conscription of Belgian diaspora men for the war effort. He requested every Belgian-Canadian house fly the Belgian and British flag to show loyalty. In April 1946, after 40 years of service with the city, he retired although his diplomatic work continued until 1947. He was a part of the welcome committee for Princess Juliana of the Netherlands when she visited Victoria, and in 1948 he was awarded the Order of Leopold II for his service to Belgium. In his later years, he continued to write emotional public letters and became a vocal critic of government policies, particularly opposing CMHC’s affordable housing initiatives in Saanich, which he felt discriminated against taxpayers. He also spoke out against age discrimination in the workforce.

The Eekman Family home served as Belgian Consulate during WWII. They displayed the two flags as Eekman had requested all Belgian Nationals do in his consular district. [Consulat de Belgique = Belgian Consulate] / L. J. Eekman. RBSC-ARC-1679-CC-PH-11090. Chung Collection. 1944. B&W Photograph


In 1949, Leon made a four-month trip to Europe, likely his first since World War I, visiting relatives in England and the Continent. By 1950, he had resumed his role as Honorary Belgian Consul for Vancouver Island. He remained an outspoken and controversial figure in the community until his death in 1954. His obituary in the Times Colonist on September 25, 1954, detailed his lifetime of contributions to Victoria and beyond. His memory lived on through his two surviving children, including Walter Gordon Eekman (born in 1912), continuing the family’s presence in Victoria for generations to come.

In 2005 some personal materials of Leon Eekman were purchased from Wells Books in Victoria, before being donated to the University of Manitoba Archives in 2015. They offer insight into how Dr. Wallace Chung may have acquired these materials.

While they can often challenge us, stories like that of the Eekman family allow us to view the range of experiences of BC residents across time. We invite you to engage with the digitized and physical materials of the Chung Collection and other holdings at Rare Books and Special Collections that may have relevance to genealogical or historical research.

 

Sources

University of Manitoba Archives, Leon J Eekman Fonds. https://umlarchives.lib.umanitoba.ca/leon-john-eekman-fonds

Leon John Eekman. Personnel Records of the First World War. Library and Archives Canada. RG 150, Accession 1992-93/166, Box 2848 – 49. Item 374921. Canadian Expeditionary Forces (CEF)

Victoria Daily Times and Victoria Times Colonist, Newspapers.com

New Books at the Law Library – 25/04/01

LAW LIBRARY level 3: HV8157 .R62 2024
D. Boyington, Diversity and Indigenous Peoples in Canada, 5th ed (Emond Montgomery Publications, 2024).

LAW LIBRARY level 3: KE5006 .B87 2024
J.W. Burchill et al, Ancillary Police Powers in Canada: A Critical Reassessment (UBC Press, 2024).
Online access: https://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=13640083

Rise Up! Sights, sounds and spaces of protest at the Music, Art & Architecture Library

Rise up! Sights, sounds and spaces of protest at the Music, Art & Architecture (MAA) Library in the Irving K. Barber Learning Centre focuses on the subject of protest and highlights materials from the MAA Library collection, along with select items from Rare Books & Special Collections and University Archives. Collectively, these items identify the myriad forms of creative expression that acts of protest can take. The exhibit will remain available to view until the end of summer term.

This exhibit was thoughtfully curated through a collaborative effort between Sara Ellis, Art & Visual Literacy Librarian, David Haskins, Music Librarian, and Paula Farrar, Architecture, Landscape & Planning Librarian and Head of MAA Library.

“Some of the selected materials highlight student sit-ins and occupation; anti-war, anti-nuclear, and anti-racism rallies; strike action for worker’s rights; and civic engagement in support of human rights, civil rights, and Indigenous rights. Other resources shed light on key principles of feminism, gender equality, and 2SLGBTQI+ rights; demonstrate disparities in access to health care, housing, and resources; and draw connections between land use and climate activism,” says Ellis.

In addition to selecting pieces for the exhibit based on their respective fields, they also organized works within the display cases by a common theme, regardless of the subject matter.

“The goal is to offer a new lens or perspective on the visual and material culture of protest and to encourage viewers to make new connections between topics or events that, previously, they may have only considered as isolated circumstances,” shares Ellis. “For example Art after Stonewall discusses the AIDS Memorial Quilt project, which connects to the music score The AIDS quilt songbook. The quilt as material object and activist analogy can be linked to the Quilt of hope : Vancouver artists for Black liberation, and the use of handicraft as a subversive tool in Crafting dissentAIDS, social change, and theater aligns with The design of protest, through the intersections of performance, choreography, political demonstration, and public space.”

Highlights from Rise up!

“We chose materials on topics that were both timely and timeless, and relevant to the current moment. This exhibition combines the three lenses through which we have presented the topics of protest and resistance: the visual (arts), the auditory (music), and the spatial (architecture),” says Haskins. Below are a few favourite highlights from each librarian.

Selections by Sara Ellis (Arts)

The photobook Black Lives Matter is an essential and impactful record of the Black Lives Matter movement and protests from New York artist Christopher Cook. The image on display, titled “Streamed,” depicts a protester holding a sign that reads: “The revolution will be streamed.” It references the iconic civil rights poem, The Revolution Will Not Be Televised, by jazz poet and spoken-word performer Gil Scott-Heron, underscoring the enduring nature of the message and the need for active participation to effect tangible societal change. 

The exhibit also features images from the UBC Archives Photograph Collection that document UBC student protests over the years, including a tent city erected on Main Mall in 1966 to lobby for increased housing on campus; a “paint-in” by students at the School of Architecture in 1974; and a series of events from Trident Concern Week in 1975, to oppose construction of a nuclear submarine base on Washington’s Olympic Peninsula.

Selections by David Haskins (Music)

Frederic Rzewski’s The People United Will Never Be Defeated!, which premiered at the Kennedy Center during the 1976 American Bicentennial, is an hour-long set of variations on a Chilean leftist protest song of the same name. Rzewski composed this piece as both a tribute to the people of Chile, and as a rebuke to American foreign policy at the time.

Rzewski has noted that an Italian revolutionary song and a German antifascist song are referenced in the work, and serve as “a reminder that parallels to present threats existed in the past and that it is important to learn from them…The extended length of the composition may be an allusion to the idea that the unification of people is a long story and that nothing worth winning is acquired without effort.” 

Comparable to Bach’s Goldberg Variations and Beethoven’s Diabelli VariationsThe People United Will Never Be Defeated! is both a 20th-century masterpiece and a call to action. Rzewski’s work is represented in this exhibition by the score and an award-winning recording by Professor Corey Hamm at UBC’s School of Music.

Selections by Paula Farrar (Architecture)

Architects Against Housing Alienation (AAHA) is a collective that formed in 2021 and brings together architects, activists, and advocates to campaign for policy changes that address issues of housing injustice in what they call “c\a\n\a\d\a.”

The displayed materials relate to AAHA’s 2023 occupation of the Canada Pavilion at the 18th International Architecture Exhibition – La Biennale di Venezia with their project Not for Sale! Materials include an official AAHA pin, a list of the collective’s ten-point Demands (to consider along with the AAHA Manifesto), and the English Press Release from the Biennale. UBC’s School of Architecture + Landscape Architecture served as the lead organization for the project, partnering with the University of Waterloo School of Architecture.

Anyone interested in learning more about the collective and its work should check out the current exhibition Town + Country: Narratives of Property and Capital, on until April 13 at the Morris and Helen Belkin Art Gallery, which includes AAHA among the participating artists.

 

Collection Spotlight: April is National Poetry Month

Poetry has the power to inspire, delight, and spark imagination in readers of all ages. This month, we’re celebrating with a special spotlight on children’s poetry picture books. Explore our featured collection and discover books that bring poetry to life in fun and engaging ways!

Just a few highlights (click the cover to take you to the catalogue record for the item):

New Books at Education Library: April 2025

Welcome to our April Booklist! This month, we’re featuring over 90 new titles, including young adult novels, picture books, and more. Check out our latest arrivals and find something new to enjoy!

Click on the book cover to visit the Google Books page for more details and previews. Clicking on the title will take you to the item’s UBC Library catalogue page to check availability or place a hold.

D810.C88 F54 2024 The Enigma girls : how ten teenagers broke ciphers, kept secrets, and helped win World War II / Candace Fleming.

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GC21.5 .E97 2023 Explorons l’océan.

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PZ7.B5319 Ah 2024 Ahoy! / Sophie Blackall.

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PZ7.H389 Sr 2024 Still Sal / Kevin Henkes.

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PZ7.G39235 Rn 2024 Ruin road / Lamar Giles.

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PZ7.D47925 Sh 2024 Shadowed / Carl Deuker

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PZ7.1.E4745 Wan 2024 Wander in the dark / Jumata Emill.

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PZ7.1.H86326 Ho 2024 How it all ends / Emma Hunsinger.

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PZ7.1.R4276 He 2024 Heatwave / Lauren Redniss.

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PZ7.1.S6796 On 2024 On the bright side / Anna Sortino.

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PZ7.1.R57747 Be 2024 Better left buried / Mary E. Roach.

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PZ7.1.M4354698 Es 2024 Escaping Mr. Rochester / L.L. McKinney.

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PZ7.1.H5617 Wi 2024 Wild about you / Kaitlyn Hill.

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PZ7.1.J6185 Bl 2023 Bladestay / Jackie Johnson.

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PZ7.1.S857 Gr 2024 Girls like her / Melanie Sumrow.

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PZ7.1.J623 Cl 2024 The color of a lie / Kim Johnson.

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PZ7.1.L785 He 2024 Here & there / Thea Lu.

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PZ7.1.D935 At 2024 The atlas of us / Kristin Dwyer.

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PZ7.1.R67 Em 2023 Emmett / L.C. Rosen.

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PZ7.1.B447 Ac 2024 Across so many seas / Ruth Behar.

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PZ7.1.T44775 In 2024 Into the sunken city / Dinesh Thiru.

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PZ7.1.H3918 Dt 2024 Diet Soda Club / Chaz Hayden.

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PZ7.1.C3166 Cr 2024 Crashing into you / Rocky Callen.

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PZ7.5.S86 De 2024 Deep water / Jamie Sumner.

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PZ7.7.F654 Ne 2024 Next stop / Debbie Fong.

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Reading at the Seed Library: Pollinators

Blog written by Rachael Huegerich
March 31, 2024

Pollinators like bees, butterflies, wasps, hoverflies, and hummingbirds are vital within BC ecosystems. Fortunately, there are lots of ways your garden can attract pollinators. Want to read more about these important creatures? Check out the display at the seed lending library at the Education Library, just past the reference desk. While you’re there, feel free to “borrow” some seeds, too!

 

Omar, the bees and me

By Helen Mortimer & Katie Cottle

PZ7.1.M6765 Om 2022

Omar, The Bees and Me encourages children to look after nature in local communities planting wild flowers to form bee corridors.

Themes around cultural identity are also explored through Omar (a new boy from Syria) and Maisie’s friendship.

The publisher, Owlet Press, also offers teaching resources to accompany the book.

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A flicker of hope

Written by Cynthia Harmony; illustrated by Devon Holzwarth

PZ7.1.H37175 Fl 2024

Lucía loves to watch the monarchs’ migration from her home in Mexico with Papá.

But this year, the monarchs’ journey north holds extra weight; Papá is heading north, too, to look for work.

He promises her that when “the weather turns cold and the monarcas return, our winged ancestors will guide me home.”

So while he spends the summer months harvesting produce on faraway farms, Lucía watches the skies for signs of the monarchs’—and her papá’s—return.

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Bruno the beekeeper: a honey primer

By Aneta Františka Holasová; translated by Andrew Lass

SF523.5 .H6513 2021

With glowing, honey-hued illustrations and friendly text, this homespun year-in-the-life of a busy beekeeper and his bees is a definitive picture book primer—whether for families contemplating a new hobby or for readers just curious to know how bees make honey.

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What’s the buzz?: keeping bees in flight

By Merrie-Ellen Wilcox

QL565.2 .W538 2015

Whether they live alone or together, in a hive or in a hole in the ground, bees do some of the most important work on the planet: pollinating plants.

What’s the Buzz? celebrates the magic of bees–from swarming to dancing to making honey–and encourages readers to do their part to keep the hives alive.

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The honeybee

Written by Kirsten Hall; illustrated by Isabelle Arsenault

PZ8.3 .H146 Hn 2018

Illustrations and rhyming text follow endangered honeybees through the year as they forage for pollen and nectar, communicate with others at their hive, and make honey.

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Un jardin pour Tipiti le colibri

Written by Lucie Papineau; illustrated by Lucie Crovatto

PZ23.P364 Jr 2020 (French collection)

Camille et Paolo le petit perroquet s’adorent. Ils font tout ensemble!

Un matin de printemps, ils aperçoivent une drôle de mouche qui vole en vrombissant.

Une mouche avec un… bec?

Ainsi débute cette grande aventure remplie de fleurs, de bourdons, de papillons et de passionnantes découvertes! Tous les pollinisateurs illustrés au début et à la fin de ce livre sont cachés dans le jardin de Camille et Paolo.

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Traveling butterflies

By Susumu Shingu

QL561.D3 S5513 2015 (Canadian Children’s Book Centre)

Traveling Butterflies indulges the awe these creatures inspire by taking a poetic, meditative look at the monarch’s life cycle.

In a lyrical voice that seamlessly blends fact and storytelling, the book zooms in to show a monarch’s progression from an egg the size of a dewdrop through growth, metamorphosis and preparation for their journey south.

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Seeds, bees, butterflies, and more!: poems for two voices

By Carole Gerber; illustrated by Eugene Yelchin

PZ8.3.G297 Sd 2001

A honeybee and a bumblebee have a chat.

A rose offers a worm a bit of its compost.

A mouse assures a root of its importance.

These fun rhyming poems for two voices are blooming, bursting, and buzzing with personality.