Archive

Posts Tagged ‘denise freedman’

Ageism Challenged: Building Inter-generational Communities

April 24th, 2013 Comments off
This coming Monday, April 29, 2013, PTS in Ottawa will be hosting a ground-breaking conference that will examine ageism as a multi-directional social behaviour. According to PTS organizers:
.
“We aim for an atmosphere of community-wide learning that will help us challenge our assumptions and grow our understanding of each other by:
  • Learning language and theories to discuss ageism as a community
  • Sharing our personal experiences with ageism using a restorative justice model
  • Synthesizing our discussion to uncover actions for building towards a healthy inter-generational community

“Ageism is a social attitude that stereotypes people based on their age. Historically speaking, ageism has been examined as a phenomenon that affects seniors. However, all of us — those at the ends of the age spectrum and those of us in the middle — experience and perpetuate ageism.”

.
For event information, from registration and payment information, to a full conference schedule, please visit the Ageism Challenged Event Page at https://www.facebook.com/events/358707744246484 or email events@ptsottawa.org.
.
.

What’s More…

.
The 
Ageism Challenged conference is particularly significant for us at Queer Ontario because we will have a number of new and established Active Members taking part in this event.
.
Active Members Dwayne Shaw and Robert Teixeira will be presenting on a panel discussion entitled Thinking through age-relations in a context of fear-based politics and homophobia / transphobia / biphobia / queerphobiawhere they will offer “the combined fruits of their various engagements with the issue of ageism in the LGBTTQ communities, considering both practical, community-based perspectives as well as offering insight based on academic research in an area that continues to be neglected as an important vector of critical analysis and practicable community engagement.”
.
Similarly, Active Member Denise Freedman will be co-hosting the conference and facilitating a number of the sessions at the event. According to Denise: “The norms through which youth and older adults interact are not always healthy, but are particularly harmful for queer youth and older adults. This is why I’ve supported this conference from the beginning, and even if only first steps, I anticipate its results with excitement.”
.
For a feature on Dwayne and Robert’s panel discussion, please visit: http://queerontario.org/2013/04/24/dwayne-shaw-robert-teixeira
.
For a feature on Denise Freedman’s work, please visit: http://queerontario.org/2013/04/24/denise-freedman
.
We hope you can make it!
.
Nick Mulé
Queer Ontario Chair
.

Member Feature: Denise Freedman

April 24th, 2013 Comments off

Active Queer Ontario Member Denise Freedman will be co-hosting the PTS Ageism Challenged Conference in Ottawa. She will also be facilitating a number of the sessions at the event.
.
.
About Denise:
.
Denise is an older, committed and somewhat talkative queer woman. For a decade, she has participated in projects and organizations aimed at the full equality of all Queer people: Canadians for Equal Marriage; Around the Rainbow, Family Services Ottawa; GLBTTQ Community Centre of Ottawa, Inc.; Ottawa Trans Community Consultation; Ottawa Dyke March; AIDS Committee of Ottawa; Egale Canada; National Consultation on the Human Rights of Trans People. Both Bill Siksay, MP, and Yasir Naqvi, MPP, have read her name, respectively, into the Federal and Ontario Hansards.
.
Along the way, Denise involved herself in the evolution of Pink Triangle Services (PTS) culminating ten years of work now as president of the board.  Within the past year, she has acquired a Masters in Social Work.
.
Her life of struggle, resistance, and resilience as a queer woman with a transsexual history, along with her education as a (queer) social worker, allow her perspective, understanding, and ability to articulate experiences of exclusion. Her work with PTS allows her the possibility to work for inclusion and community.
.
According to Denise: “The norms through which youth and older adults interact are not always healthy, but are particularly harmful for queer youth and older adults. This is why I’ve supported this conference from the beginning, and even if only first steps, I anticipate its results with excitement.”
.
For a conference schedule, please see the write-up on the Ageism Challenged Event Page at https://www.facebook.com/events/358707744246484