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People and organizations

Singer, Barney

  • Person

Barney Singer was a sessional lecturer in the UVic History Dept.

Barbarash, David, 1964-

  • Person
  • 1964 -

David Barbarash was the North American press officer for the Animal Liberation Front (ALF) from mid-1999 until late-2002. He also founded the North American Animal Liberation Front Supporters Group in Toronto in the early 1980s. Barbarash has been linked to Anti-Racist Action, Anti-Fascist Militia, Militant Direct Action Task Force, the Justice Department, Earth First!, the Animal Liberation Front and the Earth Liberation Front. He began <i>Ekomedia</i> (later retitled <i>Ecomedia</i>) in Toronto in 1984, an alternative/ anarchist wire service inspired by <i>BC Blackout</i>. Ecomedia published the <i>Anti-Authoritarian News</i>, later the <i>Ecomedia Bulletin</i>, which ran until 1992. (For more information on <i>Ecomedia</i>, see Kerry Mogg, "Introduction to Zines and Small Press," in <i>Only a Beginning: An Anarchist Anthology</i>, pg. 366)
<br>In Toronto in 1988, Barbarash was convicted of breaking the windows of fast food restaurants, fur stores and butcher shops. He was also convicted of property damage worth $50,000 and the theft of 29 cats from the University of Alberta in Edmonton in 1992. Fellow activist Darren Thurston served two years in prison for participating in the University of Alberta action, but Barbarash fled to the US to avoid arrest, and lived in hiding there for two years until the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) found him living in California. In 1994, Barbarash was deported back to Canada and served four months in jail before being released for time served and a guilty plea.
<br>A Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) investigation of David Barbarash, which began in 1997, was prompted by a series of pipe bombs sent through the mail to various individuals and organizations across Canada in 1995.
<br>In 1998, Barbarash and Thurston were charged with sending letters with razor blades inside to hunters and guide outfitters across British Columbia. The charges were later dropped after the RCMP refused to provide documents to the defendants' lawyers. It is posited that the documents would have confirmed that the RCMP were using undercover police agents, a fact Barbarash maintained the RCMP lied about at the defendants' preliminary hearing. Barbarash always stated his innocence and alleged the undercover agents were attempting to entrap him to commit crimes in the course of their investigation.
<br>Barbarash's home in Courtenay, British Columbia was raided on July 30, 2002 in response to a request from the FBI, which regards the ALF as a domestic terrorist organization. Materials seized during this raid were returned to Barbarash without ever reaching US custody, owing to a judge who overturned the search warrant in response to what she termed "triple-hearsay" used in obtaining the warrant.
<br>Of his activities regarding animal rights, Barbarash states: "Just because they can’t speak up for themselves doesn’t mean that we have the right to do whatever we please to them." (Source, ALF David Barbarash interview http://www.animalliberationfront.com/ALFront/Interviews/Interview%20with%20David%20Barbarash.htm)

South Island Women in Trades and Technology Society

  • Corporate body
  • 1982-2005

The South Island Women in Trades & Technology (SIWITT) society was a non-profit organization dedicated to providing information, education, encouragement, and support for women in trades, technologies, blue collar, or operations careers. SIWITT began meeting in 1982, was incorporated in 1985 as the Victoria Women in Trades & Technology, and was incorporated a second time in 1995 as the South Island Women in Trades and Technology Society. The organization was non-profit, received grant funds from the provincial and federal government for their operations, and were affiliated with the national WITT program.

Narroway, Marjorie

  • Person
  • ca. 1903 - ca. 1999

Marjory Narroway was born Marjory Dimsdale Jacquot circa 1903. She was born in London, England and immigrated with her family to Canada at age six. The second of three children, she had an older sister Barbara and younger brother Wilfred. The Jacquots spent two years in Winnipeg before moving to Vancouver, settling on 47th Avenue in the South Hill neighbourhood. Marjory finished high school in 1920 at age 17 and then took teacher training at the Provincial Normal School. While working as a teacher she took university classes in English but did not complete her degree. On 4 January 1934 Marjory married the musician Edward Philip Narroway, whom she had met at a church social. The wedding took place at St. Mary the Virgin Anglican, where Edward was the church organist. Following her marriage she stopped working. Seven years after she married she returned to teaching and taught for another twenty years in Port Alberni. The Narroways retired to Victoria, and it was there that Marjory took up writing. In 1970 she joined the Victoria and Islands Branch of the CAA. Narroway contributed regularly to the Times Colonist magazine "Islander."

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