Queer Joy with Daniel MacIvor

EPISODE SEVEN – Legacy

“It’s a hundred and fifty dollars more than we had this morning.”

To close this season, we re-visit more hilarious and heartbreaking moments from the inaugural 2024 Pink Award, Canada’s LGBTQ+ advocacys and LGBTQ+ activist award ceremony celebrating queer icons making a difference. Daniel speaks with our first Legacy Award winner, philanthropist, activist, art collector, bon vivant, and First To Leave The Party author Salah Bachir.  The importance of Salah’s work and his legacy is reframed in an animated conversation with Daniel and director/producer Michelle Mama, who holds Salah up as the ideal example of the late 1960’s New Canadian’s realization of the immigrant’s Canadian Dream. 

Queer Joy is a seven part podcast celebrating the 2024 Pink Triangle Press Pink Awards.
The PTP Pink Awards are a national pay-it-forward celebration of queer excellence where community champions choose changemaking charities from the queer community to uplift and amplify.  In 2024 we celebrated champions writer/actor/producer Elliot Page, musician/composer Jeremy Dutcher, activist Latoya Nugent, athlete Marie-Philip Poulin, musician/composer Rufus Wainwright and our legacy award winner philanthropist Salah Bachir. Join host Daniel MacIvor where he shares unforgettable moments from the awards and interviews where he sits down for honest and insightful conversations with our Champions and their chosen charities.   Experience Queer Joy with Daniel MacIvor, some true queer Champions and our PTP Pink Awards with host Queen Priyanka

Pink Triangle Press formed in 1971 as a collective to publish The Body Politic – a monthly newspaper that is regarded today as a game-changer in the queer media landscape.   And in 1984 as an offshoot of The Body Politic PTP formed Xtra Magazine, more focused on social life and culture, lighter fare, available free in bars. And when The Body Politic closed its operation in 1987 Xtra took over as PTP’s main publication mixing arts and culture coverage with harder news stories. There were print editions published out of Toronto, Vancouver and Ottawa.  In 2015 Xtra moved entirely online where it continues the legacy of the original publication with award-winning journalism that strives to be – as its banner proudly states – queering the conversation.  Check them out at xtramagazine.com.  

#podcast #awards #queer

What is Queer Joy with Daniel MacIvor?

Celebrating the Champions and Change makers of the 2024 PTP Pink Awards.

Queer Joy is a seven part podcast celebrating the 2024 Pink Triangle Press Pink Awards.

The PTP Pink Awards are a national pay-it-forward celebration of queer excellence where community champions choose changemaking charities from the queer community to uplift and amplify. In 2024 we celebrated champions writer/actor/producer Elliot Page, musician/composer Jeremy Dutcher, activist Latoya Nugent, athlete Marie-Philip Poulin, musician/composer Rufus Wainwright and our legacy award winner philanthropist Salah Bachir. Join host Daniel MacIvor where he shares unforgettable moments from the awards and interviews where he sits down for honest and insightful conversations with our Champions and their chosen charities. Experience Queer Joy with Daniel MacIvor, some true queer Champions and our PTP Pink Awards with host Queen Priyanka

Pink Triangle Press formed in 1971 as a collective to publish The Body Politic – a monthly newspaper that is regarded today as a game-changer in the queer media landscape. And in 1984 as an offshoot of The Body Politic PTP formed Xtra Magazine, more focused on social life and culture, lighter fare, available free in bars. And when The Body Politic closed its operation in 1987 Xtra took over as PTP’s main publication mixing arts and culture coverage with harder news stories. There were print editions published out of Toronto, Vancouver and Ottawa. In 2015 Xtra moved entirely online where it continues the legacy of the original publication with award-winning journalism that strives to be – as its banner proudly states – queering the conversation. Check them out at xtramagazine.com.

0:00:05.3Daniel MacIvor,: Hi, I'm Daniel MacIvor and this is Queer Joy,

celebrating the champions and changemakers of the 2024 PTP Pink Awards.

This episode, Legacy. The inaugural awards were held on November 7,

2024, at the Globe and Mail Centre in Toronto, hosted by drag race

royalty Queen Priyanka, with performances by brilliant queer artists including

Katie Tupper and as documented in episode six, a moment for the ages

rendition of Going to a Town by Rufus Wainwright and moving speeches by

community champions like Elliot Page and Jeremy Dutcher. It was a night

to remember, worthy of its own podcast even.

Here is PTP CEO David Walberg speaking at the awards.

We are very excited that we have as our guest tonight someone who

has stood with our community through celebration and devastation, through

thick and thin, better and worse, for decades. Since the 1980s,

she has marched with us, she has fought with us, danced with us

and has been the very definition of an ally. Please welcome now to

say a few words, Toronto's mayor, her worship, Olivia Chow.

What an honor to be here. I don't know. I'm lost for words.

I'm so excited to be here. In some ways, though, I felt,

Rufus, darkness. And it's time that when things are a bit dark and

when that debate is going on in Alberta, when you're feeling that things

are not going your way, that polarization, hatreds, that feeling of why

can't I be who I am? When you're feeling that things are hard,

think about history. Because, okay, there was always a feeling that if we

come together as a community, there is hope. There are so much talent

and love in this room. There's so much power in this room.

I see Salah here. I see all these really generous people.

It takes an ally like me that have been around for a long

time to tell you that there is hope. As long as there is

community, unity of purpose, then there is hope.

Thank you for allowing me to share this moment with you.

So celebrate. Have a great evening. Olivia Chow, everybody. Olivia, I love

you for always coming to Woody's, the gay bars, and having a drink

with the queens. Thank you. But here's my reminder to you to,

you know, maybe let's not bulldoze those gay bars for condos, okay? 0:03:02.6Daniel

MacIvor,: As we've maintained all through this podcast, Queer Joy is made

up of equal parts heartbreak and protest. So Mayor Chow gets our heartbreak

and joy in, and Priyanka brings the protest. Thank you, Queen.

And something you may have missed in the mayor's comments. When she was

speaking about the talent and love and power in the room,

she said, I see Salah here. The Salah she speaks of is Salah

Bachir. Salah was there to receive the inaugural Legacy Award. When the

idea of the Legacy Award first came up, we talked about whether to

honor a celebrity or an activist or a bon vivant or a philanthropist

and finally decided that for our first Legacy Award, why not all of

the above and all in one person? Salah came from the business world.

He was the president of Cineplex Media and the publisher of Cineplex Magazine

and through that company co founded the Scene Awards Program. You may very

well own a little piece of Salah as one of the program's 11

million members. Most notably, though, Salah has been a foundational member

of the queer community since the 1980s. He has been an incredible patron

of the arts and collector. As a philanthropist, most visibly, he raised

the money to build the 2010 wing on the 519 Community Centre. 0:04:23.1Daniel

MacIvor,: And recently he and his husband Jacob Yerex led a transformational

fundraising effort on behalf of Toronto St. Joseph Health Centre and the

newly renamed Bachir Yerex Community Renal Centre for dialysis patients.

Salah has been unstoppable, though in recent years, complications from a

kidney transplant and some serious mobility issues have forced him to step

back a bit. Though it hasn't hindered his promotional adventures in support

of his 2023 memoir, First to Leave the Party. Nor did it stop

him from attending the Pink Awards to receive his honor. Here's Salah's

speech. I'm overwhelmed. I'm thankful. I wish I could do a lot more.

Would like to do a lot more. Thank you very much for everything

and I'm so glad to be in such fabulous company.

Love you all. Thank you. David Walberg, thank you. Extra thank you.

Michelle Mama, I want to do my documentary now.

And when they go low, step on them. 0:05:33.3Daniel MacIvor,: If you don't

know Michelle Mama, who Salah shouts out in his speech, you soon will.

She's an award winning producer, director and showrunner. And recently with

Bill Taylor, co founder of the most fabulously named production company

ever, Gay Agenda. I asked Michelle how she came to be implicated in

Salah's speech. So I am doing a documentary on the lesbian icon Carol

Pope and one of the people I interviewed for that documentary was Salah.

And when I was interviewing him I kind of said, you know what,

Salah, like you're like such a like Forrest Gump type character. You are

so interesting. And I just read his book and it's just juicy. If

you like name dropping, I thought Carol was a good name dropper but

my God. And he has a very interesting story. In some ways it's

the Canadian dream. An immigrant who came here with his parents when he

was 10 and made this and basically created an empire. You know,

created an empire. And then on top of that, which is,

I think the more important part, created a legacy of change. I was

a little snot nosed, 20 something, running around, going to parties on Church

Street and I would hear about these fancy galas that God knows I

could never afford to go to that Salah was throwing. And he was

this myth, this incredible human being who was not only a huge success,

I mean, this is how far we've come, Daniel. Somebody in the early

2000s being a CEO and a corporate titan and also being an out

gay man was still a big deal. It was such a big deal.

It was like, whoa, he runs Cineplex and he's gay. He's one of

us. It's like we had someone on the inside. That was the vibe.

We had an inside man in Salah Bachir. Very few people I think

these days understand, it's very easy to make money and fuck off.

You can be a selfish, greedy CEO who we see it all the

time, but Salah was predisposed to give back. I think that has to

do with his background. Speaking as a brown person, we're not the same

flavor of brown. He's Lebanese and I'm Zoroastrian Parsi. But there is something,

I think that you have to say. It has to come from his

family, his DNA, his background, the generosity of people in the Middle

East generally. It's that energy, that warmth that

he brings to everything that he does. And he's a lion. He's a

fierce, fierce supporter of people. And that spirit that he has,

I hope carries on to future generations. I hope that selflessness is an

inspiration to others. It is to me. He's an inspiration to me for

sure. 0:08:16.5Daniel MacIvor,: Earlier I said that Salah came from the

business world, but that's not entirely true. I brought up with Michelle

a famous story about how Salah as a young teen in Rexdale,

Ontario, met the American labor activist and civil rights leader Cesar Chavez

when Chavez was in the area protesting for farmers rights. Salah had been

inspired to raise money for the cause, but only managed to put together

what Salah considered to be an unimpressive $150, 50 of it coming from

Salah's own father. When Salah apologetically presented Chavez with the

money, the activists praised the young Saleh, telling him, It's 150 more

than we had this morning. He was a kid, right? And that's a

formative moment to go, oh, I can make change. I mean,

I think you've identified like, kind of his hero origin story maybe right

there, that moment where he was like, oh, I'm just a little dude,

but I can affect change. 0:09:12.7Daniel MacIvor,: Where does that impulse

come from? And maybe it's what you're talking about in terms of culturally,

it's something. I think it comes from being from elsewhere. I think it

comes from seeing, growing up in a part of the world where you

are elbow to elbow with struggle and with poverty and with strife in

countries that are in conflict, in war zones. And I think there's a,

there is an energy around the gratitude of

being in a new place and being accepted and being welcomed.

And even if it's not conscious, I think there is, a thing of

my life could have gone very differently. I could be there,

I could be going through that, and I'm here and I'm grateful. That's

the thing. When you live between two worlds, you're never... When you go

home, you're, he's never going to be Lebanese enough. When he's here,

he's never going to be Canadian enough. You live in the in between.

But it can also be a superpower. It kind of creates almost this international

passport energy, where he's the international James Bond wingman of all

time or something. He gets joy from watching other people flourish and thrive

and be in their element. And he's, another thing about people from the

Middle East, they love music, entertainment, parties. If only I could have

been at his dinner parties in the '80s, you know what I mean? He

just is, it's not a boring ass party with monoculture. He's gonna have

a rent boy, and he's gonna have Margaret Atwood, and he's gonna have

Elizabeth Taylor and he's gonna have some crazy leather dykes. And I know.

I've read the book, I know what his dinner parties were like.

And it's like, wow. And then you add the queer element to it.

So it wasn't just high, low in terms of class and strata.

It was also like, queer and straight, and that affects change.

That's the Trojan horse element of what Salah Bachir has done in his

life is introduce people from different worlds and demystify those people

to each other. And I think that is social lubrication of the finest,

finest order. You can't get better than that. They. They broke the mold

with Salah, frankly. And I think that sort of spirit,

it's the best, honestly, he's the best example for an immigrant story. Here's

this person with all of these qualities that are maybe not North American

who comes here and makes everything better for other people. I hope that

when Salah closes his eyes at night, he understands the impact he's made

and understands how the echoes of it and the ripples of it will

continue for generations. I will say this, and you can include it or

not, because it really upset me. At the end of that event,

he sort of said, oh, well, and I don't know if he said

this to you too, but he was a little, I don't know,

glum I guess is the word. And he said, nobody cares about me

anymore now that I don't have money and now that I don't have

status, or he said something very sort of dark like that to me,

and I was really, like, shook. Because you would hope that at the

end of this long, winding, beautiful, strange journey of his life,

that he would feel a sense of satisfaction looking back and going, yeah,

I did that. And I can rest, and I can be proud of

it. And I just really hope he does know. I hope that he

does realize his value and currency to people isn't what's in his bank

account or what arts on his wall or what gorgeous property he hosts

people in. It's in his heart and soul. It's who he is as

a human. We are all lucky to just be in his orbit again. What

you leave behind in the world and how you change and help people,

I think is the only thing that matters. Honestly. That's legacy.

That's the end of the day. All of these people who can look

to him and go, my life changed because of you.

That's it. That's a legacy. That's something to be so, so proud of. 0:13:29.5Daniel

MacIvor,: When we come back, I talk to Salah. This is Queer Joy,

and I'm Daniel MacIvor. The 2024 PTP Pink Awards was made possible by

the generous support of our sponsors, and we are deeply Grateful for the

generosity of our title sponsor, DECIEM The Abnormal Beauty Company. Thanks

to Sarah Frumstein and the entire DECIEM team.

Salah has been my close friend for over 25 years. The first time

I met Salah, it was in his office. I was interviewing for a

job. I was not even 25. I was trying to impress Mr. Bachir and

the only thing that came out of my mouth was, I'm going to

introduce you to some people. That's cute, right? Salah introduced me to

like three mayors, including Olivia Chow, to a prime minister, to three

Governor General, to Elton John, and the list goes on. And I knew

the bartenders at Fly. We say that in the queer community,

we choose our own family. I chose Salah and it was an honor

to have Salah chose me as well. So, Salah, tonight, I thank you.

We thank you. And please keep doing the excellent work that you've been

doing for all these years. Merci. 0:15:06.4Daniel MacIvor,: Welcome back

to Queer Joy. I'm Daniel MacIvor and that was Canada Media Fund's Vice

President of communications and Promotions, Mathieu Chantelois introducing

legacy award winner, Salah Bachir at the 2024 PTP Pink Awards.

And this is my conversation with Salah. 0:15:22.9Daniel MacIvor,: Where

are you, Salah? Where are you currently at this moment? I'm in Paris, Ontario.

0:15:28.7Daniel MacIvor,: Thanks for doing this. Thank you. 0:15:31.5Daniel

MacIvor,: How did this all start? Can you talk a little bit about,

that's $150 more than we had this morning.

Yeah, that's stuck with me my whole life.

We were boycotting grapes outside in Rexdale, Rexdale Plaza, north suburb

of Toronto. And I didn't collect very much money and I was going

to go meet, see the Chavez that night. And

my dad, who's a union man, was a union man with the local

46, the welders and pipe fitters, and gave me $50 extra.

And then I was sheepishly, went up, said to him, I only collected

$150. But he explained that $150, how it would go, how would we

spend. And it's $150 more than we had this morning. 0:16:23.7Daniel MacIvor,:

How old were you at that time? 16 or 17. 0:16:28.7Daniel MacIvor,: So

what motivated, what pushed you? What do you think? What was it?

I've never been one to ignore something and then

I'm not sure whether it's a tight knit village life that we had

or whether it was just something that's in you that

you need to do. As in some cases, you spend more money than

you have doing. 0:16:50.8Daniel MacIvor,: You speak about this sort of general

idea of we want to do this. I don't know that people generally

want to do it. I think it's something very particular to you and

people like you. Yeah. I mean, I'm surprised as I look back. And there's

huge things that are done where money isn't raised and it's just spent

on an evening of cocktails and people doing stuff. And then no one

tells you where their money goes. So you can tell, we've raised $2

million, but the expenses behind it. And I think that that's important to

make sure that it gets to the people you're trying to get to.

It does what it has to do. 0:17:29.5Daniel MacIvor,: If I were going

to identify, and you may disagree with this, but I feel if I

was going to give you, like three babies, I would say the 519,

artists generally and the Renal Clinic. Am I missing anything that's super

significant for you? AIDS, the AIDS Foundation, stuff in the Middle East.

We've done a lot in the Middle East. Also poverty and whatever an

area I'm in that I see, like, real need. I mean,

for me, the 519 does everything. Because the 519 used to have a

clothing exchange program, used to have a health bus years ago.

Used to be the Hassle Free Clinic, used to be out of there.

It is the hub, no matter what your politics are. Unless you're a

fascist, I suppose. The Renal Clinic in healthcare, you know, because of

my kidney transplants and stuff. I did a lot of my dialysis there.

And so little things that I would see that, you know,

when you're sitting on a bed for four hours and old TVs aren't

working and you need to get little things and a generator when there

was flooding in the area, when, you know, so you could keep going

on dialysis. We did a gala saying, don't dress up, don't go out.

Just give us money. And that worked. And many of those things were

minor things, but major in a lot of ways.

The art theme has become quite a bit very Canadian in a way. 0:18:55.4Daniel

MacIvor,: It's stunning. What an amazing collection that you have. Thank

you. 0:19:00.6Daniel MacIvor,: People like Kent Monkman, they're so important,

but also mostly queer people. Yeah. 0:19:05.7Daniel MacIvor,: Do you remember

what your first purchase? Your first... I usually just bought art that friends

that needed money, I would buy art from and gift them or do

something like that. You support as much as people as you can and

become friends and you get involved in the process of getting to know

them and to introduce their art to other people. 0:19:30.0Daniel MacIvor,:

What are you proudest of? What am I proudest of? 0:19:39.0Daniel MacIvor,:

That you've accomplished, that you've done. This is where you're editing,

right? I'm proud that I was able to do what I did

wherever I could. It wasn't just having a lot of money,

writing a check, that I was an activist. I was on the streets,

I was involved. It isn't about buildings and things named after me and

that I was an activist all my life, in a way that when

I could walk and go to demonstrations and participate in all aspects.

And I'm proud that... I wish I could have done more.

I wish I could still do more. 0:20:30.0Daniel MacIvor,: What's your advice

to the community in terms of how do we come together as a

united voice? People have to remember that 40 years ago you couldn't even

mention the word hate. We've come a long way, but we may have

stepped back a little bit. But it's still every cause to fight on

and learn from those generations, the Larry Kramers and the ACT UP.

And we are all part of a united front. We are all our

allies. And then you have to have a united front for a common

enemy. And then if you believe in community or in our community,

then you can't then take our community and keep slicing it into slices

of pie of community. I think the bigger picture, always keep your eye,

as I said, that united front. The youth who are looking at us

now, here in Paris, Ontario, there's drag nights, there's painted sidewalks.

It's so active. And that's what we need to support the people who

the Trump administration or whoever comes here, it's slowly taking away

rights while we're bickering. And so I think being vigilant, and they can

do their stuff but we can do a lot more of our stuff

to get our agenda around. And in the end, I think the majority

is on our side. That's why a united front is important. 0:21:57.6Daniel

MacIvor,: It's the loud minority that seems to be taking all the oxygen,

though. We tend to be quiet. Right? And I guess we have to

get louder, maybe. Yeah, yeah. 0:22:07.2Daniel MacIvor,: Anyway, I won't

keep you any longer, Salah. Thank you. That was great. And I'm going

to talk to Michelle about you next week. You talking to Michelle about

me? Why? 0:22:16.0Daniel MacIvor,: Well, because you called out. You said

in your speech, at the end of the speech, you're like,

oh, wait, wait, Michelle Mama, I'm ready for my documentary. So I'm gonna...

I want to know. I want to hear about it. What was the

word I had read about you, that it was a word that I...

It was... Surprised me. Bashful. Bashful. I would never use that word to

describe you. But then when I heard it, I thought, oh,

yeah, maybe you are. You're shy in a way. Yeah. I think behind

all of that, you don't want to lose yourself in other things. 0:22:56.1Daniel

MacIvor,: Yeah. Anyway. All right, we'll leave it at that. I'll,

hopefully we'll get to see you. Okay, great. 0:23:03.7Daniel MacIvor,: Okay.

All right. Okay, thank you. Bye. 0:23:07.2Daniel MacIvor,: Okay, bye. 0:23:10.0Daniel

MacIvor,: I left that bit on at the end because I wanted you

to hear Salah's thank you. The sincerity of it, the smallness of it.

This is the paradox at the heart of this powerful, bashful man.

I don't think it's a new thing for Salah, but it feels more

present, more tender. And maybe this is something of what Michelle noted

as the glumness she felt in Salah after the Pink Awards ceremony.

I wonder if it's directly related to someone coming face to face with

the idea of their legacy. Because in fact, legacy is not something experienced

by the conductor of that legacy. It's only something that exists in its

effect. It's only really felt in the absence of the person to whom

the legacy belongs. No, not belongs. It belongs to those left behind,

really. It's another bit of heartbreak. But let's motivate that heartbreak

to inspire its siblings, protest and joy. Let's look forward into another

round of champions and changemakers and the PTP Pink Awards 2025.

But first, a thank you to those who made the inaugural year such

a success. Presenting sponsor DECIEM, award sponsor BMO and our tireless

leaders, Jennifer McGuire and CEO David Walberg, Gina Hara, Andrew Chang,

Mitchell Cheeseman, Lorilynn Barker, along with the whole PTP team, our

hosts, Shannon Burns and Queen Priyanka, and from Kelly Green Company,

the brilliant and unflappable Kelly Sudsbury and her fabulous wing person,

Susie Adelson. 0:24:40.8Daniel MacIvor,: Queer Joy was written and narrated

by me, Daniel MacIvor, produced by Pink Triangle Press and edited and mixed

by Jamie Foulds at Soundpark Studios. And here's some joy to go out

on, I'm a Star, Priyanka's downloadable single and a reminder to all these

stars, and especially you, Salah. I'm Daniel MacIvor. Thanks for listening.

So get on up. You're no zero. You are strong, somebody's hero. You're the

one, keep it fun, never done, your story's just begun. Love me,

hate me, underestimate me. Pin me, break me, appreciate me. I can take

it off by the fall, baby, you will see.

Baby, I'm a star.