Wednesday 24 August 2022

Can human rights work in museums serve as a pathway to decolonization?

Armando Perla
Chief Curator
Toronto History Museums, City of Toronto

Armando Perla, Photo Credit: James Recine 

Having been trained as a lawyer, I started my professional journey working with refugees and asylum seekers in Canada. After graduating from law school, I worked with Haitian migrant workers in the Dominican Republic during my time in Washington D.C., children in Central America who were trafficked and sexually exploited, and children’s rights advocates from the global south in Sweden. After several years abroad, I returned to Canada to be part of the team developing the Canadian Museum for Human Rights (CMHR). It was at the CMHR that I met Métis curator and scholar Tricia Logan and began a journey of self-discovery that completely transformed the way I understood and practiced human rights. When I started working at the CMHR, over a decade had passed since my arrival in Canada as an asylum seeker. I had attended  the University of Winnipeg, where I studied political sciences, and had also completed a Bachelor of Laws at Laval University in Quebec City and a Master of Laws at Lund University in Sweden. However, I had not learned about residential schools or Indigenous history. Learning from Logan that human rights were a Western construct that had often left out Indigenous perspectives was also unsettling for me. My Canadian and European legal training had never focused on looking critically at human rights.