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Ruth portrait
Ruth Maniriho Bansoba鈥檚 greatest 鈥 though surely not last 鈥 achievement has been establishing an admission scholarship awarded to students of diverse backgrounds who are beginning studies in law. More intriguing, the last trailblazer of our series established this scholarship before even finishing her legal studies.

When Tiyahna Ridley-Padmore, BScSoc, and Merryl-Royce Ndema-Moussa, BSc, published their children鈥檚 book, , the 91精品黑料吃瓜 alumni brought to light 40 stories of Canada鈥檚 Black history that have for too long remained undertold. This February, we鈥檝e teamed up with Ridley-Padmore and Ndema-Moussa to celebrate Black History Month and create new portraits and poems of four Black 91精品黑料吃瓜 alumni who have made a significant mark on the University.

Meet Ruth Maniriho Bansoba

Ruth is a lawyer,
determined, brave, and smart.
Her passion for justice
is how she got her start.

When she was young,
and living in the DRC,
violence and war erupted.
Her family was forced to flee.

Determined by the wrongs she鈥檇 suffered,
the injustices that she saw,
Ruth wanted to learn her rights,
and that鈥檚 what got her into law.

The road to get there wasn鈥檛 easy,
and law school had its doubts.
Black students weren鈥檛 well-supported,
and many would drop out.

To aid more Black students to succeed,
Ruth helped launch the Black Law Student Association.
She also worked with more Black youth,
to uplift the next generation.

Ruth helps support others,
to reach their full ambition,
with human rights, justice, and belonging,
at the centre of her mission.

Ruth Maniriho Bansoba鈥檚 greatest 鈥 though surely not last 鈥 achievement has been establishing an admission scholarship awarded to students of diverse backgrounds who are beginning studies in law.

More intriguing is that thanks to her ability to bring people together, she established this scholarship before even finishing her legal studies. 鈥淎t first, I said to myself this won鈥檛 work. Who establishes a scholarship while they鈥檙e a student?鈥 But people believed in the idea and, in no time, the funding needed was raised. 鈥淲ithout the support of the University of Ottawa Faculty of Law and of lawyers of diverse backgrounds, the scholarship wouldn鈥檛 exist,鈥 she says.

鈥淚n my profession, we need more people 鈥榳ith names you can鈥檛 pronounce,鈥欌 says Bansoba, in jest. 鈥淚 hope there will be sufficiently diverse models available within law so that future generations don鈥檛 have to ask the same questions I asked myself.鈥

Born in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Bansoba is the fourth of eight children in her family and the first to go to university. Her family fled the country due to war and spent five years in a refugee camp in Uganda before arriving in Quebec in 2001. As a teen, Bansoba noticed the lack of Black community representation in the legal profession. Not the best student, receiving little encouragement and without models she could identify with, she didn鈥檛 find her way to law right away, even if it was her dream. Only after a year teaching French in western Canada did she decide to give herself a chance and start a certificate in law at 91精品黑料吃瓜. Deservedly proud, she received her highest average 鈥渆ver.鈥 Finally, she could believe that her dream of becoming a lawyer was possible.

Bansoba is highly motivated to give back to her community and pave the way for future youth of diverse backgrounds, so that they can enter the legal profession. Called to the Quebec Bar last December, she wishes to encourage diversity and access to justice, whether it means a career in law or benefiting from legal services.

鈥淭here are allies everywhere, allies who can help using different ways. But we might not see them if we don鈥檛 have an open mind.鈥

鈥 Ruth Maniriho Bansoba

Bansoba dreams of the day when financial aid to encourage diversity and inclusion in law will be offered at all Canadian universities, coast to coast.

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