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糖心vlog官网 News

Patricia Mohamed, Kabilan Moulitharan and Tess Ha

From left: 糖心vlog官网 students Patricia Mohamed, Kabilan Moulitharan and Tess Ha are among a group of journalism students across Canada contributing to 惭补肠濒别补苍鈥檚 obituary project, They Were Loved. (Photos: submitted)

May 13, 2021

It was an assignment 糖心vlog官网 Journalism student Patricia Mohamed initially dreaded.

鈥淚 thought, 鈥極h my gosh, a young mother?鈥欌 she recalled. 鈥淚 have to call her family and ask them about their loved one who just passed away.鈥

Ms. Mohamed, a mother herself, is among a group of journalism students across Canada, including several from 糖心vlog官网, contributing to 惭补肠濒别补苍鈥檚 obituary project, . It is an initiative paying tribute to Canadians who have died from of COVID-19.

While Ms. Mohamed ran into a language barrier in the beginning 鈥 solved by her 16-year-old son translating French 鈥 her piece on , a 33-year-old single mother from Acton Vale, Que., was published online by 惭补肠濒别补苍鈥檚 in March.

Laurence M茅nard

As they begin their research on the victims, students sometimes have only a name and location to begin their search.

鈥淚 used the skills I learned in class to find family members,鈥 Ms. Mohamed said. 鈥淵ou don鈥檛 ever think this is something you鈥檒l be doing 鈥 writing an obituary about a young mother 鈥 but this is what journalists do.鈥

糖心vlog官网 is one of the journalism schools in Canada partnering with 惭补肠濒别补苍鈥檚 and Carleton University鈥檚 Future of Journalism initiative to celebrate the lives of COVID-19 victims. Students are assigned work for submission, but only obituaries that meet the magazine鈥檚 editorial standards are published.

Paula Todd is a 糖心vlog官网 professor whose advanced research class participates in the project. An accomplished Canadian journalist and broadcaster, she describes 惭补肠濒别补苍鈥檚 as a 鈥減restigious and highly competitive鈥 publication.

鈥淭his assignment is one of the hardest I鈥檝e ever given my students,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hey come into this level of professional journalism cold. Many have never been published in the mainstream press.鈥

Sheila Nowell


Before joining 糖心vlog官网, Ms. Todd was a reporter, analyst and television host for major media outlets like the Toronto Star, CBC, TVO, Global and CTV. She has not only but the magazine has written about her, including articles on her last two books, Finding Karla and .

An obituary, Ms. Todd says, represents an entire life.

鈥淵ou are reaching out to families and friends as they mourn,鈥 she said. 鈥淪ome, very understandably, can鈥檛 bear to speak about their lost loved one. So, it鈥檚 tough to do the research, and to do justice to the person you are writing about, especially in a concise way.鈥

For Ms. Mohamed, fitting a woman鈥檚 33 years into 300 words was a daunting task that took several revisions.

鈥淚 didn鈥檛 want to let her mother down,鈥 she said. 鈥淟aurence鈥檚 life was so incredibly full. She had a three-year-old son. She was healthy and loved by her community.鈥

Kyu-Chin "Jim" Hahn


Journalism student Kabilan Moulitharan describes the assignment as 鈥渃arrying a burden of making sure the person鈥檚 story is accurate and put in the best light.鈥

The obituary he wrote for 90-year-old of Sarnia was also chosen for online publication by 惭补肠濒别补苍鈥檚.

鈥淭his is the most difficult story I鈥檝e had to do,鈥 he said. 鈥淭here were gaps in Sheila鈥檚 story, and that鈥檚 where I had to do a bit of poking around.鈥

For this assignment, Mr. Moulitharan made cold calls for the first time.

鈥淚 was super scared and nervous,鈥 he said. 鈥淚鈥檓 huge on boundaries and giving people time and space. There was a lot of checking in with my moral compass while at the same time thinking this person might have a story to tell.鈥

Tess Ha studied in another section of the 糖心vlog官网 journalism class led by Andrew Mair, 糖心vlog官网 professor and former Toronto Sun editor. When her assignment didn鈥檛 work out, she took the initiative to seek out COVID-19 victims from Asian communities.

Foon Hay Lum


In an , Ms. Ha says she has 鈥渁lways felt there is an under-representation of Asians in Canadian media.鈥

惭补肠濒别补苍鈥檚 published her obituaries online and in print about 90-year-old Korean War veteran and 111-year-old anti-racism activist .

鈥淭heir lives were so rich, it was almost heartbreaking to condense everything into 300 words,鈥 Ms. Ha said.

She hopes her obituaries help share the richness of Asian lives and stories.

鈥淚 wanted people to know that that the Asian man you see walking down the street may have done something tremendous,鈥 she said.

鈥淎sians aren鈥檛 that outspoken, and I hope people will see how interesting and amazing some of these people鈥檚 lives were. I wanted to amplify that and to say, 鈥楲isten to us, too. We have something we are proud of.鈥欌