Ten of the most interesting things about Sylvia Fedoruk that you might not know: #ARadiantLife #SylviaFedoruk
1. She was an avid amateur photographer and won prizes at the @SaskatoonEx for photography exhibits. Image
2. She loved to fish up north. From 1948 until well into the 2000s, Syl would go north on a fishing trip. Image
3. She was on the then-Huskiette @usask basketball team which first broke the 70-point barrier: Image
4. She participated for years in an annual all-women's event at @WaskesiuRegion lovingly called the Slobstick (a take-off on the more regal Lobstick). Image
5. She was on the @usask team that developed the #cobalt60 machine -- and was delighted when Canada Post created an honorary stamp! Image
6. When she was Lieutenant Governor, the @sskroughriders won the Grey Cup in 1989! Syl had to sneak out and buy some Rider gear (scarf) so she was decked out for the celebration! Image
7. As the first woman on the federal Atomic Energy Control Board, she was front and center at the Bayda Inquiry into uranium development in Saskatchewan's north in the 1970s. Image
8. Sylvia was absolutely tickled to be LG when British royalty Andrew and Sarah came for a visit in 1989. Image
9. Near the end of her life and in recognition for her steadfast support for Huskies athletics, @usask gifted Sylvia with her Jersey-- as the number one fan. Image
10. (Gosh. I'll have to do another 10! So many stories...) The Sylvia Fedoruk School was christened with the tag line Dream. Discover. Achieve. Perfect recognition for Sylvia. Image
PS: all photos come from the Sylvia Fedoruk collection @sask_uasc !!
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More from @merlemassie

Oct 12, 2022
So. Our provincial government released a White Paper today called: Drawing the Line: Defending Saskatchewan's Economic Autonomy.
Some preliminary thoughts: 🧵
The paper situates itself squarely within the Saskatchewan second-class province rhetoric of gaining provincehood in 1905 WITHOUT full control over Crown lands.
That second-class citizenship story was straightened out in 1930 when Sask recieved its Crown lands and became the same as other provinces. Ok. That's a bare-bones historical perspective from 117 and 92 years ago.
Read 16 tweets
May 23, 2022
I'm halfway through a course on #Mentalhealth first aid, and I want to share a powerful message. Mental health can be viewed and understood via where it sits vis a vis physical health. We had various illnesses, and had to rank them from least to most needing help. Ready? Image
We were each given cards with illnesses, and we set them on the floor in the order we thought, from least problematic to most serious. When we were done, the leaders helped us rearrange them into the correct order from least to most needing care: Image
Least: gingivitis. Then, mild asthma. Next a tie: low back pain/uncomplicated diabetes. Then another tie: epilepsy affects a person about the same as mild depression. It's at this level that we first started to see mental illnesses in relation to common physical illnesses.
Read 20 tweets
Apr 10, 2022
There is a somewhat ahistorical viewpoint regarding some of Saskatchewan’s largest social/infrastructure changes that deserves review. Three that come to mind are rural electrification, telephone, and Medicare.
All came from local innovations that were scaled up. Let me explain.
Medicare’s roots were in local innovation, such as an RM hiring a local doctor via taxes, or building/supporting a cottage hospital. These early wins cascaded across municipal lines, with local variations, including medical insurance.
Eventually, we saw regional trials such as the Swift Current Health Region, then provincial-wide hospital insurance, then Medicare (which, remember, did not sit well with many doctors, worried about political interference with health care). It was incremental, trial/error.
Read 13 tweets
Sep 30, 2021
I've made the point before but I'll make it again: if you think about the pandemic as simply a health care crisis, you'll deliberately misunderstand its true reality: this is best understood as Total Mobilization.
And the two best examples of Total Mobilization for Canada are not the 1918 flu pandemic or the 1950s polio story. The two examples of Total Mobilization are WWI and WWII. If you understand that, break that down, you'll see where I'm going.
Think about the push to sign up and fight: at first, volunteers tripped over each other to go to war. As time went on, government and community shifted to reminders of duty, then shaming (white feathers) then conscription. That's a similar trajectory to vaccination.
Read 7 tweets
Mar 22, 2021
I was part of a conversation today which left me unsettled, angry and rather disgusted by the casual misogyny, the way the conversation rolled out. It had to do with farm property, marriage and divorce, and legal dispersal of farm property.
So you get a thread (sorry/welcome).
I am a trained western Canadian historian AND a woman farmer, and I can tell you that white women fought against patriarchal property laws in western Canada for generations.
But first, let's be frank: western Indigenous women had extensive rights of their own, AND in regards to property including married property, which were stripped in the colonization of western Canada.
Read 33 tweets
Jan 9, 2021
There's a meme going around comparing the Capitol insurrection with BLM protests. Here are a few key differences the meme conveniently ignores:
1. Leadership. The sitting POTUS *called for* the event. Not just responded after. Called for it.
2. Amplification: the sitting POTUS used social media to advertise the event for weeks, giving it legitimacy and voice.
3. Sedition. The sitting POTUS, despite 50+ court cases and 50 states certifying results, still blatantly and knowingly lies and calls the recent US election results fraudulent. He knows -- and we all know -- the results are correct.
Read 19 tweets

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