
Organized rhyme: How Halifax’s poet laureate became ‘a change-maker’
HALIFAX — A poet didn’t make history in Halifax last week, but she might have been the catalyst for changing how the city commemorates its history.
Rebecca Thomas, Halifax’s 31-year-old aboriginal poet laureate, went before Halifax council with a poem chiding councillors for shutting down debate last year over how the city commemorates its controversial founder.
Edward Cornwallis issued a bounty on the scalps of her Mi’kmaq ancestors — men, women and children — but is still honoured with a park, statue, and even a street within a stone’s throw of the city’s Mi’kmaq friendship centre.
Moved by her poem, a rookie councillor decided council needed to revisit the issue sooner than later — it will debate his motion at its next meeting.