Â鶹AV

Samir Shaheen-Hussain wins Haile T. Debas Prize

Samir Shaheen-Hussain, MDCM, isĚýthis year’sĚýrecipient of the Haile T. Debas Prize, established in 2010 toĚýrecognize Faculty of Medicine and Health Sciences (FMHS) members whoĚýpromoteĚýthe ideals of equity and anti-racism through practical action.ĚýDr. Shaheen-Hussain, whoĚýwasĚýrecently promotedĚýto Associate Professor, wasĚýAssistant ProfessorĚýin theĚýDepartment of PediatricsĚýwhen the prize was awarded; he is also an Associate Member of theĚýSchool of Population and Global HealthĚýand a pediatric emergency physicianĚýat the Montreal Children’s Hospital.ĚýFor more than 20 years, he hasĚýbeen involved in social justice movements,Ěýand is currently part of the Caring for Social Justice Collective.ĚýIn 2020, he publishedĚýĚý(foreword by Cindy Blackstock and afterword by Katsi’tsakwas Ellen Gabriel), which has garnered widespread acclaim andĚýwonĚýseveral awards.ĚýWe sat down with Dr. Shaheen-Hussain to discuss how he became involved in social justice work andĚýhis thoughts onĚýeffectingĚýreal changeĚýtowardsĚýhealthcare equity.Ěý


When did you first become interested in the areas of social justice and healthcare delivery?

A few key experiences catalyzed my politicization process. After my first year of medical school, I was part of a volunteer summer elective at a pediatric hospital in Rabat, Morocco. Then, in third year, I did a family medicine rotation in Sioux Lookout in northern Ontario. It was jarring to witness injustices on both global and local levels, and they hit hard because children were often most harshly impacted. Around the same time, I saw and, at times, faced the racist backlash following the 9/11 attacks in the United States. Together, these experiences transformed my worldview to understand how dominant systems and structures create suffering but also how people organize collectively to resist and fight back for their health, safety, and dignity.

Did your social justice work play a part in choosing to become a pediatric emergency physician?

Not specifically, but I had wanted to work with kids as long as I can remember. I’m privileged and humbled to work as a pediatric emergency physician. Maintaining clinical excellence is a responsibility I take seriously given the role we play for children and their families during particularly vulnerable moments in their lives. My clinical work is also very grounding and serves as a strong impetus for effecting change because I witness first-hand the impacts of harmful social, economic, and political realities on children, their families and their communities, all of which also impact on the fabric of our society more broadly.

Engaging with children and youth in various spheres of my life–often being marked by their curiosity and resilience–has certainly inspired my social justice work.

Is there a specific moment that has left a lasting impact on your social justice work?

When I was young, I recall being struck by pictures of family members at protests against war and occupation, including a demonstration in Montreal in solidarity with the Kanien’kehá:ka resistance during the 1990 Siege of Kanehsatà:ke (commonly referred to as the Oka Crisis).

In 2002, I was part of a group of Â鶹AV students who formed the Indigenous Peoples Solidarity Movement, and Katsi’tsakwas Ellen Gabriel was then the director of the First Peoples’ House. She played a key mentorship role for many of us, and has remained a dear friend ever since. Her unwavering and fierce commitment to struggles for Indigenous sovereignty, environmental justice, and human rights spanning more than 30 years is truly an inspiration.

I would be remiss if I didn’t acknowledge the many educators, activists, mentors, and friends who continue to teach me about decolonization and social justice by modeling what radical solidarity means on the ground.

When you accepted your award, you mentioned the COVID-19 pandemic and the deaths of George Floyd and Joyce Echaquan exposing “the fault lines of societal injustices on a global scale.” Do you think any real change has started happening since those terrible events?

Important steps have been taken in health care and academia such as the adoption of Joyce’s Principle by the FMHS and the MUHC, but we cannot rely on the same economic, political, and social systems that have produced entrenched injustices to help us put an end to them.

We live in a time fraught with uncertainty and anxiety about our collective future. We have to think creatively, courageously, and collaboratively to carve out new possibilities, making sure that no one is left behind, and work together to build a new world where it is easier to be empathetic, to prioritize cooperation, mutual aid, and solidarity, to respect human dignity, and to live in harmony with our ecosystems. Academic and healthcare institutions can have an important role to play in this, but tangible and sustained change can’t occur without urgent commitments and actions towards a fundamental re-structuring of society.

Dr. Shaheen-Hussain has directed his Prize money to five Â鶹AV groups: the Indigenous Health Professions Program, First Peoples’ House, the Welcome Haven project, the Office of Social Accountability and Community Engagement, and the Department of Pediatric Chair’s discretionary fund.Ěý

Related:

Fighting for a hand to hold:Ěý

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