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NewsImmersive exhibit from BC Office of the Human Rights Commissioner to stop...

Immersive exhibit from BC Office of the Human Rights Commissioner to stop in Kelowna

BC’s Office of the Human Rights Commissioner is hosting an audio-visual exhibit in Kelowna that will allow visitors to step inside the stories of people impacted by hate in our province. 

Open to the public from May 2 to 4, the From Hate to Hope exhibit will provide an immersive experience based on what we heard during the Commissioner’s Inquiry into hate in the pandemic and the large-scale works of art that emerged from it across B.C.

The Kelowna public presentation of the immersive exhibit will take place at the Alternator Gallery (103 – 421 Cawston Ave., Kelowna) on May 2 from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m., May 3 from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. and May 4 from 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Registration is not required and there is no cost to attend.

The  exhibit will initially travel to three other communities in different regions of the province: Fort St. John (May 10 and 11), Nanaimo (May 16 and 17) and Vancouver (May 23). Its inagural showing took place in Vancouver on April 24 

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