Seeing Indigenous Canada in South Sudan
It was the parts of South Sudan where First World and Third World conditions overlapped that reminded me of the Canada I knew.
Journalist, professor at the Ryerson School of Journalism
Karyn, aka Pabàmàdiz, is best known for her work as a Parliament Hill reporter and as the executive director of news and current affairs at the Aboriginal Peoples Television Network, where she ran the news department for seven years. She joined Ryerson\'s faculty in the spring of 2020 while completing a Nieman Fellowship at Harvard University. Karyn has worked in both daily news and on long-form investigations at a variety of outlets including ichannel, VisionTV, CBC and CTV. Karyn is a past president of the Canadian Association of Journalists and current Co-Chair of its Advocacy Committee. Karyn is a board member of Canadian Journalists for Free Expression. She is a Journalists for Human Rights ambassador and worked as an expert trainer for the program in South Sudan in 2018. Her journalism has been recognized by the Canadian Association of Journalists, the Canadian Screen Awards, the Native American Journalists Association and the Public Policy Forum. She holds degrees in journalism and history. Karyn is a citizen of the Pikwàkanagàn First Nation in Ontario and is of mixed Algonquin and Italian descent. When she is not engaged in acts of journalism, you'll find her paddling a canoe, shooting photos and eating frybread.
It was the parts of South Sudan where First World and Third World conditions overlapped that reminded me of the Canada I knew.