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Ceta Ramkhalawansingh catalogues more than 50-year career of feminist activism: Toronto Star

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(Steve Russell/Toronto Star via Getty Images)

After five decades in activism, city-building and community planning, UUֱ alumna Ceta Ramkhalawansingh has amassed an impressive collection of local history – and she is donating some of it to her alma mater. 

So far, Ramkhalawansingh – who co-founded the first women’s studies program at UUֱ in 1971 and was one of its first lecturers – has shipped off 30 cartons of records to the UUֱ Archives and 17 boxes of feminist-theory and Caribbean-studies books to the New College library, .

“My big pandemic project has been trying to make that knowledge and information available and not lost,” Ramkhalawansingh told the Star.

Ceta Ramkhalawansingh (centre) at UUֱ in 1975 (photo by Robert Lansdale/UUֱ Archives)

In 2020, 50 years after creating the women’s studies program, Ramkhalawansingh was celebrated for establishing the Ceta Ramkhalawansingh Scholarship to support students in the at UUֱ.  She said at the time that she “never really left UUֱ” and continues to give back to the community through her current project.

“If I could make a contribution to increasing that knowledge,” she told the Star, “I’m more than happy to spend the time doing it.”

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