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Doug Ruck is finding a better way

Despite events that seem to indicate a regression in the observance and respect for fundamental human rights and equality, prominent lawyer, human rights activist and Aurum Award 2024 recipient Douglas Ruck (BAā€™72, LLBā€™77) remains hopeful that EDI&A initiatives will prevail.
A portrait of Ruck smiling and dressed formally indoors with greenery in the background.

Posted: May 24, 2024

µž²ā:ĢżEmily MacKinnon

When Doug Ruck (BAā€™72, LLBā€™77)Ā was a child in the 1950s, his family moved to a white suburb in Dartmouth. The residents petitioned to keep them out, saying a Black family moving in would reduce the value of the neighbourhoodā€™s properties.

Ruck remembers his parents, Calvin and Joyce, explaining to Ruck and his siblings that they could not be ā€œfreewheeling or loosey-gooseyā€ in their attitudes, even in their own backyard. Ruck learned at a young age that the necessity of being courteous and introspective was even more important for Black people. ā€œWe were being watched very closely, being judged very closely,ā€ Ruck says. ā€œHow we behaved, how we spoke, how we dressed, it was all significant.ā€

Watch the video for 2024 Aurum Award recipient, Doug Ruck.

Building community

You could be forgiven for assuming that moving into a neighbourhood with such outright disdain for his family would make Ruck bitter and jaded. In fact, the opposite is true. Under the tutelage of his father, the late Senator Calvin RuckĀ (DSWā€™79, LLDā€™94) (who, alongside his son, is included in Dalā€™s Notable Alumni), Ruck learned the importance of building community.

Senator Calvin Ruck was an impressive man. Revered for his social and civil rights work, Ruck says his father ā€œthe Senatorā€ and his father ā€œthe manā€ were one and the same. Striving for equality was baked into his personality, home life and work ā€” and he instilled those same values in his children.

Ruck remembers his father building a skating rink in their backyard each winter. ā€œHe did that for several reasons,ā€ Ruck explains. ā€œWe had a place to play, but also, it meant other children in the neighbourhood would come to our yard. It was a focal point.ā€ Over the years, the rink became a wintertime tradition the families in the neighbourhood looked forward to, and Calvin would decorate it with lights and seating.

ā€œHe knew there were people who didnā€™t want us there, but his belief was we shouldnā€™t walk around with a look of hatred on our faces or a sense of anger,ā€ Ruck says. ā€œWe will speak out if the need arises and do so forthrightly, but we will be courteous and work to become an integral part of this community.ā€

Legal education at home and at Dal

Ruck says the notion of community-building was integral to his fatherā€™s work and was a lesson Ruck absorbed early on. For instance, Calvin organized a drycleaning service for the families of neighbouring Preston, N.S., a primarily African Nova Scotian community. He would pick up and drop off items, going into homes (sometimes for hours while Ruck waited in the car reading books). He would discuss water and electricity services, schools, landscaping ā€” you name it, Calvin wanted to hear about it. As Ruck grew older, he was invited into these conversations about injustice and inequality. Eventually, he found his input was being sought.

By the time Ruck entered law school at ×īŠĀŠÓ°ÉŌ­““ in 1973, having completed his undergraduate degree at the University of Kingā€™s College (where today he serves as Board of Governor Chair), he was well on his way to becoming a respected civil rights activist. But as one of three Black students in his law class, he says his primary feeling at that time was isolation. And not because people werenā€™t around to talk to, but because he just didnā€™t know who was safe.

ā€œI wasnā€™t going there lamenting the state of the world every day to my fellow students,ā€ he says. ā€œI had no reason to discuss these points with them. I didnā€™t wish to show that vulnerability.ā€

Instead, he dedicated himself to his studies, graduating in 1977 and opening his own private legal practice. Ruck worked for years in labour relations and human rights law, applying his fatherā€™s lessons to his work and becoming a sought-after voice in matters of equity, diversity and inclusion. In 2021, Ruck was inducted into the Bertha Wilson Honour Society by ×īŠĀŠÓ°ÉŌ­““'s Schulich School of Law, which celebrates the impact alumni make an a local, national and international scale.

Not just a ā€˜tick-the-boxā€™ exercise

For a time, Ruck was Nova Scotiaā€™s ombudsman, considering and investigating complaints from people who believed they had been treated unfairly when accessing government services. In 2020, he led a team to identify systemic anti-Black racism at the Nova Scotia College of Physicians and Surgeons. In 2021, he undertook a review of systemic discrimination in the Nova Scotia Barristersā€™ Society.

That work led to Ruck being regularly contacted to deliver talks and workshops about identifying and mitigating workplace discrimination. A good starting point, he says, but itā€™s not a one-and-done conversation; not an exercise that merely ticks a ā€œdiversity educationā€ box.

ā€œWhat you hear in an hour is just scraping the surface,ā€ Ruck says. ā€œAfterwards is the time to start getting deeper into the issues and expose the trauma, the anxiety, and becoming comfortable being uncomfortable. Because itā€™s not a comfortable conversation.ā€

Lawyer Doug Ruck is sitting at a desk in an office with one hand, fingers splayed, on the desk and wearing a serious expression.

Going forward

Calvin dreamt of a society in which discussions of race-based equity and inclusion were no longer necessary. Ruck now knows that likely wonā€™t happen in his own lifetime, but he is encouraged by the fact that we are having these conversations at all, and that theyā€™re getting more complex. Having folks coming to the table, even if itā€™s to dispute what he says, is a step in the right direction, Ruck says. At least theyā€™re engaging.

While attitudes and behaviours have not undergone a seismic shift to the point that there is no longer a need to be vigilant, Ruck says he is encouraged that we continue to have meaningful conversations on the streets and in boardrooms. ā€œAll of these factors help to foster equitable and inclusive workplaces,ā€ he says.

ā€œSuch initiatives provide me with hope and a sense of well-being, asĀ I see that the work of my father and mother and the efforts of so many others who have also walked this path were not in vain.ā€