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Jean Augustine

 
Black Biography: Jean Augustine

politician

Personal Information

Born on September 9, 1937, in Happy Hill, St. George's, Grenada; daughter of Ossie and Olive Simon; married Winston Augustine, 1968 (divorced, 1981); children: Valerie, Cheryl
Education: Earned degree from Toronto Teacher's College, 1963; earned M.Ed. from the University of Toronto.
Politics: Liberal Party of Canada.
Religion: Roman Catholic.
Memberships:
Selected: York University, board of governors; The Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto, board of trustees; Donwood Institute, board of directors; Harbourfront Corporation, board of directors; Metro Toronto Housing Authority, Chair; Congress of Black Women of Canada, national president.

Career

Elementary school teacher in Grenada; nanny for a Toronto family, c. 1959, and clerk in a medical-billing firm; became elementary school teacher in the Toronto public school system, and then vice principal and principal; named chair of the Metro Toronto Housing Authority, late 1980s; Canadian House of Commons, Member of Parliament, 1993-; served as Parliamentary Secretary to the Prime Minister, c. 1995-2005; Secretary of State for Multiculturalism and the Status of Women in Canada, Canadian government, 2002-04; Special Advisor for Grenada, Canadian government, 2004-.

Life's Work

In 1993 Jean Augustine made Canadian political history as the first black woman ever elected to the nation's House of Commons. Nine years later, Augustine achieved yet another historic advance when she became the first woman of African heritage to serve as a cabinet minister in Canada. "Being the first black feels good, yes, but more than that, it says to others and to ourselves that blacks can be in every place in society," she told Vernon Clement Jones of Toronto's Globe & Mail newspaper in the spring of 2002, not long after being appointed Canada's newest Secretary of State for Multiculturalism and the Status of Women. "It's important that no one be able to say that blacks can't perform in every segment of Canadian society because we can."

Never Knew Her Father

Augustine is one of a large number of Caribbean immigrants who came to Canada in the years following World War II. She was born on September 9, 1937, in Grenada, an island nation in the southeastern Caribbean Sea that was then still part of the British colonial empire. She grew up in a village called Happy Hill near Grenada's capital of St. George's. Her father, Ossie Simon, was a sugarcane-plantation worker, but he died before she was a year old after a deadly bout with tetanus, which he contracted during a visit to the dentist.

Augustine's mother, Olive, was already expecting a second child when her husband died, and the entire family was adopted by an older woman in the village, whom they called "Granny." Granny had no children of her own, but owned some property and was moderately well-off. Such communal and charitable arrangements were more commonplace in West Indian society during Augustine's youth. Granny's was a household in which Augustine was encouraged to excel in school, and she did. She won a scholarship to a local Roman Catholic school, where she earned top grades. During her high-school years, she founded an all-girl band and also hosted her own youth program on a local radio station before graduating a year early.

Augustine's first job was as a schoolteacher in Grenada, but her pay was less than $10 a month. On Sundays she would write letters for other Grenadians who had never learned to read or write, but wanted to keep in touch with relatives living overseas. This experience exposed Augustine to people who had left the West Indies in search of better economic opportunities, and at the age of 22 she herself moved to Toronto, Ontario, Canada, to take a job as a nanny. She arrived on a special visa the Canadian government gave out to citizens of other nations inside the British colonial realm, which required her to work one year as a domestic servant. After that period was finished, she would then be free to stay in Canada permanently if she wished.

Earned Teaching Degree

Augustine was fortunate, however, for she had been placed with a Toronto pediatrician's family who were of a generous spirit, and they recognized that the new caretaker for their children was overly qualified for the job. They helped her find an office job at a medical-billing firm, and she took night-school classes at the Toronto Teacher's College and babysat for the family in her spare time. After earning her teaching degree, Augustine taught elementary school in the Toronto public school system. She eventually became one of the first black school principals in the country.

Augustine had long been active in black political and social organizations in Toronto, which began to emerge as a richly multinational and multicultural hub during the 1960s. The very first meeting of the Grenada Association was held in her apartment, and she also served on a committee that helped to organize the city's first Caribana Festival in 1967, which later became one of Toronto's most important annual tourist events.

Augustine's community service work led her into politics. She served on municipal task forces on drug abuse and crime, and became active in the Liberal Party, one of Canada's two main political parties. In 1985 she was named to the transition team for new Ontario premier David Peterson. As thanks for her service, Peterson made her chair of the Metro Toronto Housing Authority, the largest landowner in Canada. Augustine served in that post for six years, and came to the attention of the national Liberal Party leadership as a result.

Stunning Victory at the Polls

In 1993, Liberal Party leader Jean Chrétien nominated her for a place on the party ticket for the coming general elections, which allowed her to bypass the usual party nomination process. She was the Liberal Party candidate for a seat in the House of Commons from Etobicoke-Lakeshore, a section of Toronto. Her victory at the polls that year was all the more significant given the fact that her riding, or electoral district, did not have a strong black political base; in fact, of Etobicoke-Lakeshore's 65,000 voters, just 700 were black Canadians.

Augustine became the first black woman to serve in the House of Commons, and joined one other African-Canadian there, Ovid Jackson, a fellow Liberal Party MP (member of parliament) also of Caribbean heritage. She earned some unfavorable publicity, however, when reporters asked her on election night about how it felt to be Canada's first black woman parliamentarian. "I didn't run as a black politician," Chatelaine writer Cecil Foster quoted her as saying. "I ran as a competent woman who is Canadian." Though some viewed her statement as a rebuff to the black community in Canada, Augustine's supporters pointed out that she had long been active in serving the African-Caribbean émigré community in Ontario.

Appointed to Cabinet

Chrétien had become Prime Minister thanks to the Liberal Party's victory at the polls in that 1993 election. He named Augustine to a two-year stint as his Parliamentary Secretary, which gave her a prominent place during legislative sessions in the House of Commons with a seat located just behind the Prime Minister's. Her duties included responding to questions on behalf of Chrétien or his cabinet ministers when they were unable to attend House of Commons sessions. She also earned high marks for her primary role representing Etobicoke-Lakeshore, and she went on to serve on the foreign affairs committee in the House of Commons. Her constituency returned her to the House of Commons in the 1997 and 2000 elections. In May of 2002, Chrétien made Augustine Secretary of State for Multiculturalism and the Status of Women in Canada. She was the first black woman in the cabinet in the 135-year history of Canada's federal government and served until 2004. She was reelected to the House of Commons that same year by a large majority.

Augustine is divorced and has two grown children. Back in Grenada, she is a well-known figure and object of national pride. After her impressive first House of Commons win, Grenadians presented her with a plaque that read simply, "From Happy Hill to Parliament Hill." She remains grateful to Granny, who died in 1967, and to her other family members and friends who have also passed away. "I know they would have been so proud to know that I've come to this country," she told Foster in Chatelaine, "and I've reached the highest place in the land."

Awards

Selected: YWCA Woman of Distinction Award; Kaye Livingstone Award; Ontario Volunteer Award; Pride Newspaper Achievement Award; Rubena Willis Special Recognition Award; Toronto Lions' Club Onyx Award. .

Further Reading

Periodicals

  • Chatelaine, November 1994, p. 52.
  • Globe & Mail (Toronto, ON), June 7, 2002.
On-line
  • "Jean Augustine," Liberal Party of Canada, www.liberal.ca/bio_e.aspx?&id=35023 (July 6, 2005).

— Carol Brennan

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Wikipedia: Jean Augustine
Top
The Honourable
 Jean Augustine

Member of Parliament
for Etobicoke-Lakeshore
In office
1993 – 2006
Preceded by Patrick Boyer
Succeeded by Michael Ignatieff

Born September 9, 1937 ( 1937-09-09) (age 72)
St. George's, Grenada
Political party Liberal
Residence Toronto
Profession School principal
Religion Roman Catholic

Jean Augustine, PC (born September 9, 1937 in St. George's, Grenada) is a former Canadian politician.

From 1993 to 2005 Augustine was a Liberal member of the Canadian House of Commons, representing the riding of Etobicoke—Lakeshore. She is a former member of Cabinet, and a former school principal. Augustine served as the Parliamentary Secretary to Prime Minister Jean Chrétien from 1994 to 1996, and was the Minister of State for multiculturalism, and the status of women until 2004.

Augustine was born in Grenada. Before entering politics, she was an elementary school principal with the Metropolitan Separate School Board in Toronto.

She has served on numerous Boards including the Board of Governors of York University, the Board of Trustees for The Hospital for Sick Children, the Board of Directors of the Donwood Institute, the Board of Harbourfront Corporation and Chair of the Metro Toronto Housing Authority. She was also National President of the Congress of Black Women of Canada.

In the 1993 federal election, Augustine became the first African Canadian woman elected to the Parliament of Canada and subsequently the first black woman in a federal Cabinet. She also served three terms as Chair of the National Liberal Women's Caucus.

In February 2002, Jean Augustine was elected Chair of the Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs and International Trade. On May 26, 2002 Jean Augustine was appointed Secretary of State (Multiculturalism) (Status of Women). In December 2003, she was re-appointed to the new Cabinet as Minister of State (Multiculturalism and Status of Women). In 2004, she was appointed to the position of Assistant Deputy Chairs of Committees of the Whole, making her the first African Canadian to occupy the Speaker's Chair in the Canadian House of Commons.

Augustine was the Founding Chair of the Canadian Association of Parliamentarians on Population & Development, Chair of the National Sugar Caucus, Chair of the Micro-credit Summit Council of Canadian Parliamentarians, Chair of the Canada-Slovenia Parliamentary Group and Chair of the Canada-Africa Parliamentary Group.

Jean Augustine holds a Bachelor of Arts, Master of Education and Honorary Doctor of Laws degrees from the University of Toronto.

Through fundraising efforts, Ms. Augustine supports the Jean Augustine Scholarship Fund, which assists single mothers to undertake post-secondary study at George Brown College.

She is the recipient of the YWCA Woman of Distinction Award, the Kaye Livingstone Award, the Ontario Volunteer Award, the Pride Newspaper Achievement Award, the Rubena Willis Special Recognition Award and the Toronto Lions' Club Onyx Award.

On November 28, 2005, Augustine announced her intention to retire and that she would not be a candidate in the 2006 Canadian election. She endorsed Liberal Michael Ignatieff to succeed her.

In 2007, Augustine was nominated by the Government of Ontario to become the first Fairness Commissioner, a position created to advocate for Canadians with foreign professional credentials.[1]

References

  1. ^ Augustine to be Ont. advocate for foreign workers. CTV News from Canadian Press (CP). Mar 13, 2007. [1]

External links

27th Ministry - Government of Paul Martin
Cabinet Posts (1)
Predecessor Office Successor
Minister of State (Multiculturalism and Status of Women)
2003–2004
26th Ministry - Government of Jean Chrétien
Sub-Cabinet Post
Predecessor Title Successor
Hedy Fry Secretary of State (Multiculturalism) (Status of Women)
(2002–2003)

 
 

 

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