“For me specifically, growing up, I didn’t grow up like a typical black person does. I don’t want to say I didn’t fit in, but there were times where I felt like I was being put into a box and I was like “Shit, this isn’t me”. My parents came here in 93 from Burundi and they moved to Richmond Hill so that’s where I grew up… Like all suburbs there are different crowds that you hang out with as a kid. There’s the crowd that you’re like “You know these guys aren’t going to be up to anything good.” and then there’s the crowd where you’re like “These people aren’t going to get you into trouble”. Not that Richmond Hill is bad or anything, but you can tell that there’s a certain type of people that didn’t work to amount to much.
Being a black man, people tend to think “oh you’re a black guy you should be hanging out with those guys, acting like that” I don’t know if it was a conscious decision or not but I decided , “you know what I’m not going to do that, I’m just going to do what’s best for me”… At the end of the day, hanging out with the people I chose to, defined my path..my first job out of university was for Adidas, but under the hockey brand. Like, who would’ve thought that a black guy would be doing hockey right? But growing up a lot of my friends liked hockey and I just picked it up. People were always confused as to why I knew stuff about hockey, even those same people I grew up with! It’s just something a black guy wasn’t supposed to be knowledgable on. For me it wasn’t wasn’t about what a typical black guy should be doing, but what will help me in the long run and how to learn can I learn from everyone. At the end of the day that’s what got me that job and opportunity, because I was different from what people thought I should be, and I’m thankful for being uniquely me.”