Mairuth Sarsfield

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Mairuth Hodge Sarsfield, CQ (1925 – May 7, 2013) was a Canadian activist journalist, researcher and television personality,[1] as well as an accomplished broadcaster, civil servant, and best-selling author.[2][3]

Biography[]

Born and raised in Montreal, she worked as host for the CBC, CTV, and TVOntario and later became one of the first Black female members appointed to the board of directors of the CBC. For Canada's External Affairs Department, she worked on projects such as Expo 67 in Montreal and Expo '70 in Osaka, Japan, where she organized the Canadian pavilion, for the respective world Expos. As a senior information officer for the United Nations Environment Programme in Nairobi, Kenya, she developed and launched a worldwide campaign known as "For Every Child a Tree".

Her Canadian best-selling novel No Crystal Stair was chosen for inclusion in Canada Reads 2005, championed by Olympic fencer Sherraine MacKay.

Mairuth was the mother of Jeremy Hodge (deceased 1979) and noted Canadian pioneering film-maker Jennifer Hodge de Silva (deceased 1989).

Awards and honours[]

She won numerous awards for theme coordination at World's Fair pavilions for Canada, and has been awarded with the Chevalier a L'Ordre National du Quebec in 1986, the National Congress of Black Women Foundation's First Literary Award, for No Crystal Stair, as well as 'Mairuth Sarsfield Day' by the city of Cleveland for her work with the United Nations in Nairobi.

Works[]

  • No Crystal Stair (1997)
  • My Friend and I
  • The Fourth Wise Man

References[]

  1. ^ "Mairuth SARSFIELD Obituary: View Mairuth SARSFIELD's Obituary by Ottawa Citizen". Legacy.com. May 7, 2013. Retrieved May 30, 2013.
  2. ^ "Mairuth Sarsfield: From Little Burgundy to Expo 67".
  3. ^ "Mairuth Sarsfield wrote eloquently about Black multiculturalism".

External links[]

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