U of T alum honours mom through Swan Francis Award

May 28, 2024
Portrait of Celeste Francis Esteves, inaugural Swan Francis Award recipient Rebecca Russo, and Claudette Francis
From left, Celeste Francis Esteves, inaugural Swan Francis Award recipient Rebecca Russo, and Claudette Francis at the Woodsworth College 50th anniversary celebration in March 2024. Photos courtesy of Celeste Francis Esteves.

Many people would be inspired by U of T alum Celeste Francis Esteves.

Francis Esteves rose above the challenges of being a first-generation, mature student to earn her honours bachelor of arts as a member of Woodsworth College in 2006, but she didn’t stop there. She also earned her master of education from U of T’s OISE in 2012 and is now in the midst of earning her PhD, also from U of T.

Her involvement with the Woodsworth College Alumni Association — as president, secretary and vice-president, and chair of the committee that organized the 35th Anniversary Spring Reunion in 2009 — earned her an Arbor Award in 2011.

But while she is indeed an inspiration, her focus right now is on honouring the person who inspires her — her mom. Here, in her own words, Francis Esteves explains why she created the Swan Francis Award in her mother’s honour, in support of Woodsworth College students studying Canadian, Black or Indigenous history, culture or arts:

Swan Francis: a beacon of inspiration

The Swan Francis Award for Woodsworth students studying Canadian, Black or Indigenous history, culture or arts is inspired by my mother, a beacon of inspiration for me through her passion for education and teaching.

Celeste Francis Esteves and Claudette Francis celebrate Celeste’s convocation in 2006.

Celeste Francis Esteves and Claudette Francis celebrate Celeste’s convocation in 2006.

My mother, Claudette Francis (née Swan), is a teacher who immigrated to Quebec in 1969 as a Black single woman from Guyana. Shortly after her arrival, she received a federal placement on Rapid Lake Indian Reserve to teach English to the Indigenous community.

At the beginning of each school year, she grieved with the community as school-age children were bused away to residential schools.

My mom eventually received a permanent placement at Kateri Tekakwitha school on a Mohawk reserve where she worked for over a decade.

During that time, she married my dad, George Francis, a Guyanese man of African, Portuguese and Dutch descent and settled in Ville LaSalle, Montreal.

Celeste Francis Esteves and Claudette Francis celebrate Celeste’s convocation in 2006.

Celeste Francis Esteves and Claudette Francis celebrate Celeste’s convocation in 2006.

Every working day and special occasion she drove over the Mercier Bridge to the reserve and remained embedded in the community, taking part in all aspects of the Mohawk culture.

I was born on April 17, on the anniversary of the death of Kateri Tekakwitha. Kateri Tekakwitha was a young Mohawk woman, also known as the Lily of the Mohawks.

She was canonized by the Catholic church in 2012. I was baptized in 1975 at the St. Francis Xavier Mission in Kahnawake, Quebec.

I spent many summers, PA days and even a birthday or two singing, dancing, beading and hanging out with my friends and the elders of the Mohawk community.

Claudette Francis and Celeste Francis Esteves visit their paver stone at U of T’s St. George campus.

Claudette Francis and Celeste Francis Esteves visit their paver stone at U of T’s St. George campus.

It was only after moving to Toronto in my mid-teens that I realized how little everyday Canadians knew about Indigenous culture and history.

I am a Black Canadian of Quebecois, Guyanese, Portuguese and Indigenous cultures.

I now live, work and raise my family in Toronto, on the traditional lands of the Huron-Wendat, the Seneca, and the Mississaugas of the Credit.

These are the influences that have shaped who I am today.

It is my hope this award encourages a new generation of scholars to pursue the truth of our history and create a more equitable, diverse, and inclusive Canada.

I am also grateful to Funké Aladejebi, an associate professor in the Department of History, whose book “Schooling the System: A History of Black Women Teachers” reaffirmed my commitment to establishing this award as a legacy to my mom.”

Claudette Francis and Celeste Francis Esteves visit their paver stone at U of T’s St. George campus.

Claudette Francis and Celeste Francis Esteves visit their paver stone at U of T’s St. George campus.