But unlike Obama, tonight, he came up short at his first try at electoral office. In the race for Mayor of Montreal, hes currently getting about 7% of the votes counted.
Balarama Holness, 36, a law student and community organizer who once played professional Canadian football, is becoming a leading voice against systemic racism in his country.
For Balarama Holness, the defining moment of his life happened four years before he was born. It was at a Bob Marley concert in Montreal, when the eyes of his Québécois mother and his Jamaican father interlocked as the singer wailed, Get up, stand up, stand up for your rights!
It was the final year of the freewheeling 1970s, and his adventurous Francophone mother and ascetic Anglophone father were strangers in a sprawling hockey arena. But Mr. Holness said barriers of language and race momentarily collapsed as the Marley anthem washed over the crowd a rare alchemy that he said he had spent his whole life chasing.
It was the final year of the freewheeling 1970s, and his adventurous Francophone mother and ascetic Anglophone father were strangers in a sprawling hockey arena. But Mr. Holness said barriers of language and race momentarily collapsed as the Marley anthem washed over the crowd a rare alchemy that he said he had spent his whole life chasing.
Mr. Holnesss outsized swagger and ambition are perhaps inevitable he noted that because of his parents respect for Hindu tradition, they named him Balarama, considered by some a god with extraordinary strength. A first cousin, Andrew Holness, is Jamaicas prime minister.
In Balarama Holnesss case, he has grabbed Canadian headlines after mobilizing a grass-roots movement over the past two years that pushed Montreals City Hall to hold hearings on systemic racism. That is no small accomplishment in Quebec, a French-majority province where the government has repeatedly denied the existence of systemic racism.
In Balarama Holnesss case, he has grabbed Canadian headlines after mobilizing a grass-roots movement over the past two years that pushed Montreals City Hall to hold hearings on systemic racism. That is no small accomplishment in Quebec, a French-majority province where the government has repeatedly denied the existence of systemic racism.
p.s. The 70s in Montreal was the place to be. freewheeling 70s is most apt.