Special screening for kids of Black Panther: Wakanda Forever helps shatter Black stereotypes | CBC News
For the first time in the five years since they moved to Canada from Dubai, Abdullah and Sophia Allamy were able, this Saturday, to take their five children for a family outing — a special big screen viewing of Black Panther 2: Wakanda Forever.
“This was the first time for us to go to a movie, all of us as a family,” Sophia said, adding that having three children under five makes it difficult to plan trips out.
It was all possible because of Empowerment Squared, a Hamilton non-profit that supports racialized, marginalized and new Hamiltonians, paid for the tickets and snacks. Around 120 people, mostly families with children, attended the screening Saturday morning at Jackson Square’s Landmark Cinema. Families grabbed popcorn while traditional African drumming rang out.
Leo Johnson, founder of Empowerment Squared, said the Black Panther films are meant to be fun, but there’s also an important message.
He said they start conversations about how Black people are depicted in media.
“A lot of Black families have seen themselves negatively stereotyped for a long time,” he said, adding that the Black Panther movies show Black people in a “different light”.
Olohigbe Asikhia brought her son and daughter, seven-year-old Jay and three-year-old Joy, to watch the movie.
Jay said his favourite parts of the movie were watching the fighting scenes, seeing Black Panther in his suit, and having popcorn.
Asikhia said her children seeing Black superheroes on the big screen was important to her.
“We have a preconceived image of what heroes look like,” Asikhia said. “So, to see our culture being showcased, the richness of our culture, is an amazing experience.”
“For them to see it… It’s a way of connecting back to our culture and our ancestors.”
Johnson said it is important for Black children to see themselves represented in media. And, it’s just as important for kids who aren’t Black to see Black people in roles as heroes and scientists like in the Black Panther films.
“We need to let Black kids and newcomer kids start to believe they have the same possibilities like every other child, and more importantly for non-Black kids as well, to begin to undo the negative stereotypes that have been created in society,” Johnson said.
‘The diversity of appreciating other cultures’
Before the movie played, Johnson led an African drum circle to welcome visitors to the theatre.
“There’s nothing more appropriate for what we were doing than opening with some African drumming,” he said.
Asikhia said “Where we come from (in Nigeria), this is what we call the talking drum. The talking drum is an old traditional way of chanting to the ancestors.”
“I really appreciate a little showcasing of culture and the diversity of appreciating other cultures, and the unity and the blending of all the cultures together,” she said.
For more stories about the experiences of Black Canadians — from anti-Black racism to success stories within the Black community — check out Being Black in Canada, a CBC project Black Canadians can be proud of. You can read more stories here.
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