Main Street looking south from City Hall, ca. 1882, City of Winnipeg
Public Spaces celebrating Dr. Jose Rizal: A Conversation about Deep Equality and Making Cities Livable by Alison Marshall, and Brian Mayes
Dr. José Rizal Park Opening June 21, 2014, hosted and organized by the Knights of Rizal (shown on the right), a voluntary organization that promotes the hero’s ideals such as education
Tenne Dayandante stands beside bust of Phillipine National Hero
Bill Norrie, Winnipeg Commemorative Mural
http://www.themuralsofwinnipeg.com/Mpages/muraloftheyear.php?action=gotomural&muralid=76
Devi Sharma, 2014, House Speaker
Winnipeg’s first mosque, 1976
Winnipeg’s Chinatown
Chinatown street naming for Dr. Joseph Du
Gandhi Statue, Canadian Museum for Human Rights,
Winnipeg Chinatown 1949Credit: Barry Chan
Indigenous garden, One of Winnipeg City Hall Year of Reconciliation Projects
Dr. José Rizal the national hero of the Philippines who has attained the status of a secular saint throughout the diaspora
Manitoba Filipino Street Festival Procession, Winnipeg, 2015Credit: Phil Hossack
Since 1997, the Knights of Rizal have fundraised to provide annual university scholarships to promising grade twelve students
who have at least one Filipino parent.
Chicago’s Dr. José Rizal Commemorative Building Plaque and Statues. Chicago’s Filipino students were among the United States’ first Knights of Rizal in 1906.
Credit: Tom ColinaPlans for Dr. José Rizal Park
Credit: Tom ColinaPlans for Dr. José Rizal Park
Dr. José Rizal Park Opening June 21, 2014