What does assisted dying say about how we live? by Christopher Levan "There is a rich melody in the rhythm of life and death — not always pleasant, but very real."
A minister talks about growing up in Adolf Hitler’s Germany by Paul Knowles Martin Rumscheidt on his father’s complicity in the Nazi extermination of Jewish people.
When outrage becomes the new normal in the age of Trump by David Wilson As Donald Trump arrives at his first year in office, the author takes a look at how initial feelings of shock have
Don Hume was a minister nearing retirement. Then he tried crack cocaine. by Justin Dallaire At first, he used the drug about once a month. Then it was every few weeks. Then every few days. Before he
Historical statues are a battleground for contemporary issues by David Wilson If statues could talk, they might tell us a bit about context
Ideologies are colliding at Canadian universities, and free speech is caught in the crossfire by Justin Dallaire "Universities are supposed to be places for the exchange of ideas, not for ideological war."
The real story of 100 Huntley Street by Muriel Duncan David Mainse's aim was saving souls – on daytime television (From the archives: September 1977)
The race to save Canada’s fragile bat population by Elena Gritzan One of nature’s least loved creatures is in crisis — and we could all end up paying the price
I spent 48 hours alone in a treehouse to channel Thoreau by Anne Bokma "Maybe a two-day sojourn deep in the woods is a good way to confront our aloneness and even find some kind of
11 immigrants putting down roots in Canada and the United Church by Broadview Staff "Lima was a bit difficult. It’s a Catholic society; I was never out of the closet there."