ARTIST | ANTI-OPPRESSION CONSULTANT + LIBERATION EDUCATOR
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BLACK FUTURE MONTH

BLACK FUTURE MONTH B. INC BLACK HISTORY EDUCATION

B Current's B inc Program is proud to announce a partnership with multidisciplinary Toronto based artists and educators to bring you a diverse range of Black History month programming for participants ages 6 - adults. Sessions are available for educational, community, corporate and arts-based partners. Our educators are talented, offering unique opportunities for learning and engagement. Offering flexible booking from November through June. 
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Book Now

Meet the facilitators 

dainty smith
dr. omisoore dryden
ekow nimako
rania el mugammar

Black Canada: Life and Art (session for students)
This presentation engages students in learning about the Black people in Canada from the transatlantic slave trade to the present. Students will explore Black Canadian art, culture and lives through engaging with poetry, visual art and movement (as observers and/or participants). Contributions to art, science, culture and language by Black Canadians will be shared. Students will explore the concepts of racism and exclusion through a lens that is motivated by empathy and action. Participants will learn how to recognize and address prejudiced behavior and how to support each other to create a safe and inclusive school and community.

Duration: 1 Hour
Size: Flexible
Fees: Sessions range from $200 to $2000 depending on content, duration, number of participants and format, we can work with your budget and your needs to deliver high impact programming
Needs/ Supplies: Projector with HDMI Output + Sound

Artist/ Facilitator Bio: Rania El Mugammar is a Sudanese Canadian, Artist, Arts Educator, Equity, Anti-oppression, Liberation and Meaningful Inclusion Educator & Consultant, performer, speaker and published writer. As a writer, Rania's work explores themes of identity, womanhood, Blackness, flight and exile, migration, belonging, gender, sexuality and beyond. Rania's primary mediums are poetry, spoken word and oral storytelling. She is a published poet, storyteller and playwright. Rania is an experienced anti-oppression, equity, inclusion and liberation educator and consultant who is unflinchingly committed to decolonization and freedom as the ultimate goals of her work.

Black Canada: Racism, Resilience and Resistance at the Intersections (session for educators)
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This workshop uses the concepts and framework of anti-oppression to explore anti-Black racism and representations of Black Canada in a Canadian cultural context. Participants will engage with multimedia resources, exercises and discussion to explore strategies for addressing oppressive behaviours such as interpersonal, internalized and institutional racism. Historical contexts will provide a framework, however, the workshop focuses on the present day realities of Blackness in Canada. Black forms of knowing and being will be explored through a community based and artistic lens.

Duration: 1 Hour ( Lecture Format ), 2.5 Hours ( Workshop Format)

Size:  Lecture (Flexible), Workshop (Up to 35)
Fees: Sessions range from $200 to $2000 depending on content, duration, number of participants and format, we can work with your budget and your needs to deliver high impact programming
Needs/ Supplies: Projector with HDMI Output + Sound
​

Artist/ Facilitator Bio: Rania El Mugammar is a Sudanese Canadian, Artist, Arts Educator, Equity, Anti-oppression, Liberation and Meaningful Inclusion Educator & Consultant, performer, speaker and published writer. As a writer, Rania's work explores themes of identity, womanhood, Blackness, flight and exile, migration, belonging, gender, sexuality and beyond. Rania's primary mediums are poetry, spoken word and oral storytelling. She is a published poet, storyteller and playwright. Rania is an experienced anti-oppression, equity, inclusion and liberation educator and consultant who is unflinchingly committed to decolonization and freedom as the ultimate goals of her work.

Black Health Equity – Why it Matters
This workshop will allow participants to build capacity for health equity for Black people in Canada. Focusing on the history of anti-black racism and colonialism, and using case studies, participants will learn strategic tips for making health access more equitable. There will be an overview of the role of racism in the production of health inequities which will be discussed through an intersectional lens.

Duration: 1 Hour ( Lecture Format ), 2.5 Hours ( Workshop Format)
Size:  Lecture (Flexible), Workshop (Up to 35)
Fees: Sessions range from $300 to $2000 depending on number of participants
Suitable for: Ages 18 and up
Needs/ Supplies: Projector (w/ screen or wall space), audio equipment, movable chairs, space to perform movement

Artist/ Facilitator Bio: Dr. OmiSoore H. Dryden holds a PhD in Social Justice Education from OISE/UT with a graduate certificate in Sexual Diversity Studies.  Dr. Dryden’s research explores how the history of anti-black racism and colonialism negatively impact the health of Black people in Canada. She is the co-editor of the book, Disrupting Queer Inclusion: Canadian Homonationalisms and the Politics of Belonging (UBC Press, 2015). Prior to her PhD studies Dryden was the Diversity Advisor, Sexual Orientations and Gender Identities, at the University of British Columbia (2004-2006); and the Advisor for Race and Ethnic Relations/Sexual and Gender Diversity at York University (1993-2004).

Building Beyond: An Afrofuturistic Lego Workshop
Building Beyond is a 90-minute sculptural workshop designed to help young people of all ethnicities (ages 7+) explore the unique and exciting world of Afrofuturism –a fantastical, sci-fi cultural genre that features African and  Afrodiasporic peoples at the centre of their own epic stories. Using an array of Lego elements and a pre-made facial template, participants get to build their own descendants as they imagine them to be a thousand years in the future. They are also encouraged to illustrate the names of their “Legacies” or write their origin stories to accompany their artwork. The best part: whatever they build, they keep.

Duration: 1.5 hours
Size: Flexible
Fees: $1500
Suitable for:  7 years +
Needs/ Supplies: Chairs, desks, projector (w/screen or wall space)
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Artist/Facilitator Bio: Ekow Nimako was born in Montreal and studied Fine Arts at York University. He began using Lego in his professional practice in 2014 and has since cultivated a unique approach to sculpting the iconic material. Drawing on his fascination with mythology and the metaphor of West African proverbs, Ekow's current exploration Building Black: Mythos constructs a haunting realm centred on 'supernatural melanin-rich children' and their sentient animal counterparts. Ekow lives and works in Toronto, Canada.

Building the Block: Sustainable City-building with Lego
Building the Block is a 90-minute urban design challenge that uses Lego to explore the question: What does building inclusive and sustainable communities look like in the not-too-distant-future? Participants are presented with variations of Lego elements and readymade configurations and prompted to cooperatively shift and build communities that reflect the tenets of inclusive, accessible, and sustainable city building:
Transportation
Waste Management
Clean Energy Production
Affordable Housing
Parks & Green space


Duration: 1.5 hours
Size: Flexible
Fees: $1500
Suitable for:  7 years +
Needs/ Supplies: Chairs, desks, projector (w/screen or wall space)
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Artist/Facilitator Bio: Ekow Nimako was born in Montreal and studied Fine Arts at York University. He began using Lego in his professional practice in 2014 and has since cultivated a unique approach to sculpting the iconic material. Drawing on his fascination with mythology and the metaphor of West African proverbs, Ekow's current exploration Building Black: Mythos constructs a haunting realm centred on 'supernatural melanin-rich children' and their sentient animal counterparts. Ekow lives and works in Toronto, Canada.

Confronting Islamophobia: Inclusion and Allyship (session for educators)
​This workshop explores manifestations of Islamophobia in Canadian cultural contexts, participants will reflect on the intersectional experiences of Muslims in order to foster meaningful inclusion and allyship. The workshop will examine internalized, interpersonal and institutional Islamophobia through exploration of narratives of Islam in a national and global context. Participants will learn helpful strategies for confronting Islamophobic microaggressions/ bystander intervention, support community organizing/ actions, challenge policy and address harmful legal, institutional, media and cultural practices that foster criminalization and marginalization of Muslim communities across Canada.

Duration: 1 Hour ( Lecture Format ), 2.5 Hours ( Workshop Format)
Size:  Lecture (Flexible), Workshop (Up to 35)
Fees: Sessions range from $200 to $2000 depending on content, duration, number of participants and format, we can work with your budget and your needs to deliver high impact programming
Needs/ Supplies: Projector with HDMI Output + Sound
​

Artist/ Facilitator Bio: Rania El Mugammar is a Sudanese Canadian, Artist, Arts Educator, Equity, Anti-oppression, Liberation and Meaningful Inclusion Educator & Consultant, performer, speaker and published writer. As a writer, Rania's work explores themes of identity, womanhood, Blackness, flight and exile, migration, belonging, gender, sexuality and beyond. Rania's primary mediums are poetry, spoken word and oral storytelling. She is a published poet, storyteller and playwright. Rania is an experienced anti-oppression, equity, inclusion and liberation educator and consultant who is unflinchingly committed to decolonization and freedom as the ultimate goals of her work.

Confronting White Supremacy in Queer Communities
What does it mean when white queers yell, "All Lives Matter?" How has white supremacy directed gay activism in Canada? In this session, participants will be familiarized with the behaviours and actions of white supremacy in queer communities and how to actively minimize the harmful impact of racist behaviours and beliefs. The workshop will provide concrete examples and suggestions to take on the difficult yet necessary work of social justice and activism.
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Duration: 1 Hour ( Lecture Format ), 2.5 Hours ( Workshop Format)
Size:  Lecture (Flexible), Workshop (Up to 35)
Fees: Sessions range from $300 to $2000 depending on number of participants
Suitable for: Ages 18 and up
Needs/ Supplies: Projector (w/ screen or wall space), audio equipment, movable chairs, space to perform movement

​Artist/ Facilitator Bio:
Dr. OmiSoore H. Dryden holds a PhD in Social Justice Education from OISE/UT with a graduate certificate in Sexual Diversity Studies.  Dr. Dryden’s research explores how the history of anti-black racism and colonialism negatively impact the health of Black people in Canada. She is the co-editor of the book, Disrupting Queer Inclusion: Canadian Homonationalisms and the Politics of Belonging (UBC Press, 2015). Prior to her PhD studies Dryden was the Diversity Advisor, Sexual Orientations and Gender Identities, at the University of British Columbia (2004-2006); and the Advisor for Race and Ethnic Relations/Sexual and Gender Diversity at York University (1993-2004).

Deliberate Desires
Deliberate Desires is workshop focusing crafting a story and performance that is about intentionally speaking to our desires without shame. In this process, the participants will create a mini one-person show. Incorporating a monologue and a dance and movement piece. In which the participants speak on what they dream of, long for and desire without judgement or shame. What would it look like if we could speak freely to what it is we long for? What do we desire? Ourselves? Love? Sexuality without limits? Freedom? To be seen? To be wanted? To be glamourous? What are we hungry for? And can we give ourselves permission to say it out loud?

Duration: 4 hours
Size: Flexible
Fees: $500
Suitable for: Early 20’s to late 30’s
Needs/ Supplies: Speakers. Space to perform movement.
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Artist/Facilitator Bio: Dainty believes that through the art of storytelling and a willingness to be exposed that genuine human connections can be made. Her performances often tell deeply vulnerable stories regarding race, religion, sexuality and challenging social boundaries. Dainty studied performing arts at George Brown College and is a powerful self taught storyteller, performer, and orator. She wrote and self produced a multidisciplinary play titled Daughters Of Lilith. Her diverse array of stage performances include the Mayworks Festival, Rock. Paper. Sistahz, Caminos Festival for Aluna Theatre, The Rhubarb Festival at Buddies in Bad Times Theatre, Artscape, and Daniels Spectrum Theatre. She is the founder of Les Femme Fatales: Women of Colour burlesque troupe, the first  burlesque troupe for women of colour in Canada.

Islam and Blackness: Precarious Intersections (session for educators)
This workshop explores the intersection of Islam and Blackness from a historical and present day perspective. Islamophobia and Anti Black Racism in the lived experience of Black Muslims, as well as Anti-Blackness and in Muslim communities and spaces will be examined. Models for inclusion, resistance and resilience are central to the themes of the workshop. This workshop uses a queer positive, gender affirming, anti-oppressive framework to situate the intersectional experiences of diverse Black Muslims within a larger power structure. Gendered Islamophobia and Islamophobia in non Muslim Black communities will also be explored. The workshop will also introduce the concepts of Anti-Black Islamophobia from an academic and social perspective.

Duration: 1 Hour ( Lecture Format ), 2.5 Hours ( Workshop Format)
Size:  Lecture (Flexible), Workshop (Up to 35)
Fees: Sessions range from $200 to $2000 depending on content, duration, number of participants and format, we can work with your budget and your needs to deliver high impact programming
Needs/ Supplies: Projector with HDMI Output + Sound
​

Artist/ Facilitator Bio: Rania El Mugammar is a Sudanese Canadian, Artist, Arts Educator, Equity, Anti-oppression, Liberation and Meaningful Inclusion Educator & Consultant, performer, speaker and published writer. As a writer, Rania's work explores themes of identity, womanhood, Blackness, flight and exile, migration, belonging, gender, sexuality and beyond. Rania's primary mediums are poetry, spoken word and oral storytelling. She is a published poet, storyteller and playwright. Rania is an experienced anti-oppression, equity, inclusion and liberation educator and consultant who is unflinchingly committed to decolonization and freedom as the ultimate goals of her work.

Islam and Canada: History and the Present (session for students)
This session will lead students through a series of guiding questions about Islam, Muslims in Canada, diversity and inclusion of Muslims in our communities. Participants will also explore Islam and Muslims’ contributions to Canada’s society and culture through engaging with work of diverse Muslim artists, athletes, journalists, scientists and trend makers.
The guiding themes/questions  for the session are:
What is Islamophobia?
How do we talk about Islam/Muslims?
What stories do we hear about Islam and Muslims and from who?
What does a Muslim look like?
What stories do Muslims tell about themselves? (on social media, in art, literature, and other creative pursuits)?
What does Islamophobia look like?
What can we do when we hear or see it?

Duration: 1 Hour
Size: Flexible
Fees: Sessions range from $200 to $2000 depending on content, duration, number of participants and format, we can work with your budget and your needs to deliver high impact programming  
Needs/ Supplies: Projector with HDMI Output + Sound

Artist/ Facilitator Bio: Rania El Mugammar is a Sudanese Canadian, Artist, Arts Educator, Equity, Anti-oppression, Liberation and Meaningful Inclusion Educator & Consultant, performer, speaker and published writer. As a writer, Rania's work explores themes of identity, womanhood, Blackness, flight and exile, migration, belonging, gender, sexuality and beyond. Rania's primary mediums are poetry, spoken word and oral storytelling. She is a published poet, storyteller and playwright. Rania is an experienced anti-oppression, equity, inclusion and liberation educator and consultant who is unflinchingly committed to decolonization and freedom as the ultimate goals of her work.

Our Fathers, Sons, Lovers and Little Brothers
February 26, 2012, Florida. A 17 year old Black boy wearing a hoodie leaves a 7/11 carrying a bag of Skittles and an iced tea. He never makes it home. Our Fathers, Sons, Lovers and Little Brothers invites us to enter the world of an infamous teen, relive his last moments, and face the intricacy of his dance into the afterlife.  

“At one point, you’re gonna be the one driving and a police officer is gonna pull you over. Cause they can, so they will. When that happens, what are you gonna do?”
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Our Fathers, Sons, Lovers and Little Brothers explores how Black youth negotiate safety in an anti-Black world. Student matinees include an intimate post-show talkback with the creative team, and an in-depth study guide by request.

Themes and curriculum connections: English, Drama, Dance, Equity Studies
Fees: $15/ student, 1 free teacher ticket per 20 students
Suitable for: Students grades 6 through 12, teachers and administration
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Artist/ Facilitator Info: ​Written and Performed by Makambe K Simamba. Directed by Donna-Michelle St. Bernard. Dramaturged by Audrey Dwyer. Produced by B Current performing arts.

Too Black to be Queer, Too Queer to be Black
This workshop explores the white supremacy, patriarchy and misogyny that Black queer and trans people experience in Canada. Participants will be introduced to the foundations of anti-black racism, homophobia and transphobia in Canada. Participants will work collectively to gain understanding of strategies for change. The workshop will provide different tools and mechanisms that can be used to disrupt and confront these systems of oppression and the unique experiences of Black queer and trans people.

Duration: 2.5 hours
Size:  Up to 30
Fees: Sessions range from $300 to $2000 depending on number of participants
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Suitable for: Ages 18 and up
Needs/ Supplies: Projector (w/ screen or wall space), audio equipment, moveable chairs, space to perform movement

Artist/ Facilitator Bio: Dr. OmiSoore H. Dryden holds a PhD in Social Justice Education from OISE/UT with a graduate certificate in Sexual Diversity Studies.  Dr. Dryden’s research explores how the history of anti-black racism and colonialism negatively impact the health of Black people in Canada. She is the co-editor of the book, Disrupting Queer Inclusion: Canadian Homonationalisms and the Politics of Belonging (UBC Press, 2015). Prior to her PhD studies Dryden was the Diversity Advisor, Sexual Orientations and Gender Identities, at the University of British Columbia (2004-2006); and the Advisor for Race and Ethnic Relations/Sexual and Gender Diversity at York University (1993-2004).

Writing Our Freedom (session for students)
This hands on workshop engages students in a variety of poetry writing exercises such as “The Blank Space Poem “ - a collaborative writing exercise, “I am, but I am not ! “ - an identity poem and “Healing Haikus” . These writing explorations are intertwined with conversations and learnings around themes of Black identity in Canada, Black culture and history, as well as modern day Black Canadian experiences.

Duration: 1 Hour
Size:  Up to 25
Fees: Sessions range from $200 to $2000 depending on content, duration, number of participants and format, we can work with your budget and your needs to deliver high impact programming
Needs/ Supplies: Projector with HDMI Output + Sound
​

Artist/ Facilitator Bio: Rania El Mugammar is a Sudanese Canadian, Artist, Arts Educator, Equity, Anti-oppression, Liberation and Meaningful Inclusion Educator & Consultant, performer, speaker and published writer. As a writer, Rania's work explores themes of identity, womanhood, Blackness, flight and exile, migration, belonging, gender, sexuality and beyond. Rania's primary mediums are poetry, spoken word and oral storytelling. She is a published poet, storyteller and playwright. Rania is an experienced anti-oppression, equity, inclusion and liberation educator and consultant who is unflinchingly committed to decolonization and freedom as the ultimate goals of her work.

Who is b inc?

​Through innovative groundbreaking workshops, the B Inc (B Current)  initiative empowers various organizations and corporations to adopt progressive practices. It challenges participants to think beyond the buzz words of “diversity” and “inclusivity” and put anti-oppressive thinking into action. B Inc can help your organization reach its equity, inclusion and anti-oppression goals in policy, process and practice with a focus on accessible and engaging education and consultation.

​Last season, renowned anti-oppression activist Rania El Mugammar engaged over 600 artists, arts administrators, cultural curators and community leaders towards meaningful and sustainable change. Now it’s your turn. After celebrating 27 years of diverse theatre, we understood that the inclusive environment we had created from administration to production staff, and of course, growing from our own mistakes was something that most organizations could learn from. This powerhouse of a community-engaged multidisciplinary artist, organizer and arts educator will work alongside your organization to develop programs with the core prin­ciple of art as a tool for social change and creative liberation. With a deep commit­ment to anti-oppressive practices and social justice education, organizations will engage in workshops with Rania to better diversify their practices. For personal, in-house facilitation or full-service consultation, contact Rania to tailor a workshop specific to your organization’s needs and budget. We host regular pop-up workshops for individuals and organizations. For organizations of up to 4 people, we charge a group rate of $200 which can go towards the creation of a future in-house workshop within our season. If interested  sign up for our newsletter. 

about  b current

​ For over 27 years, b current has produced outside-the-box performance pieces, ideas, workshops, and mainstage productions. We splashed onto the scene in 1991, when ahdri zhina mandiela founded the company, and we brought to Toronto the first ever production of a Dub Theatre script, mandiela’s dark diaspora… in dub. The kinetic artistic energy from this fuelled our pioneer work, feeding and shaping the future of Canadian performance art through culturally-rooted creation. Since inception, b current has developed scores of internationally celebrated artists and their works, with a focus always on engaging the community and creating space for diverse voices to be heard. B current develops new works by diverse artists primarily rooted in the cultural, social, and political experiences of the Canadian and international Black and brown Diaspora. In order to effectively do this we have dramaturgy & workshop sessions, public readings, and workshop performances, as well as in-depth training programs for emerging creators. They produce daring and groundbreaking theatre creations and since inception we’ve mounted over a dozen main stage plays, and 100+ other public performances.


  • Home
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  • About
  • Contact
  • Free Up! Abolition Series
  • Anti-oppression + Equity
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  • In Our Own Hands