Thank you, Mr. Chair.
Thank you to both of you for being here today.
As someone who was born, raised, and spent my whole life in Toronto, I'm honoured to be listening to you today, Ms. Sadlier, because I've seen the evolution and the growth in the consciousness, not just among African Canadians in the city of Toronto but the entire city, to the history of African Canadians. You and all of your partners—artists, civil society, groups that have spent countless hours, and years in fact, and withstood the barrage of media criticism—should be commended as you have persevered. So thank you so much for that.
Campaign 2000 just released their 2011 report card. Campaign 2000 was a response to an initiative in Parliament in 1989 to end child poverty by the year 2000. I bring it up because we're talking about this museum. It's clear that poverty in Canada—and we can talk about Toronto maybe even more specifically—is racialized. We have a city where 50% of the residents of Toronto were not born in Toronto. I remember growing up in Scarborough, and I have to tell you, I remember the day the first African Canadian walked into my classroom. Today, if you take the Finch bus through Scarborough, through Etobicoke, just about every single person on that bus is from the multi-ethnic, multi-national, multi-faith African Canadian community. By and large, they are living in poverty.
If we're going to do some 2017, 150th birthday legacy project that does not address this essential core issue of the future—and we've got over 600,000 children living in poverty—then we've missed a huge opportunity. So I want both of you to speak to the issue of poverty among racialized communities, and the issue of the multi-ethnic African Canadian community. We have new African Canadians in our country now. We have a large Haitian community. We have a growing Ethiopian-Eritrean community in Toronto.
It's a twofold question. How would a museum connect to these new communities? But more importantly, in my view, how would a museum help to push the marker forward in the pursuit of eliminating poverty among children?