Toronto

Toronto mayor meets members of hip-hop community to talk gun violence solutions

​Mayor John Tory met with three prominent members of Toronto's hip-hop community on Friday to discuss possible solutions for the recent spate of gun violence in the city.

Tory was 'very receptive' to ideas that were put forth, rapper Kardinal Offishall said

Mayor John Tory met with members of Toronto's hip-hop community on Friday to discuss possible solutions for the recent spate of gun violence in the city. (Taj Critchlow/Instagram)

​Mayor John Tory met with three prominent members of Toronto's hip-hop community on Friday to discuss possible solutions for the recent spate of gun violence in the city.

Filmmaker Director X posted a message on Instagram saying he joined rapper Kardinal Offishall and producer Taj Critchlow to start talks they hope will lead to "solutions both long and short term."

The music video and movie maker said it's part of Tory's outreach to a number of members of the local hip-hop community following a string of shootings that left three people dead and at least eight injured over the past week.

"I want the youth to know that there are people who truly care about their well-being and their future," the director wrote in his post.

Hip-hop artists tackle issue on social media

The meeting followed recent efforts by members of the hip-hop community to crowdsource feedback on social media from their Toronto fans about recent events.

Kardinal has previously addressed the gun violence in his own social media posts, saying that a "lack of community funding and programming" has led to "desensitized youth with a lack of resources," but he firmly denied it has anything to do with music.

"This is about a need for leadership to increase, this is about many things — but this is not about a correlation between rap and violence. Not today. No thanks," he wrote in a July 1 post on Instagram.

A day earlier, two men associated with the local rap scene — 21-year-old Jahvante Smart, also known as Smoke Dawg, and 28-year-old Ernest Modekwe — had been killed in a shooting in the downtown area.

Those men were among the 11 people that were shot over a week's span beginning on June 29. In one of the shootings, four people were injured in Toronto's Kensington Market neighbourhood with one of them dying in hospital. 

Toronto rappers Smoke Dawg, right, and Koba Prime, left, were among 11 people who were shot over a week's span beginning on June 29. (Jake Kivanc)

Kardinal expressed optimism about the initial meeting with Tory, noting that the mayor "read over every last comment.

"Sometimes we look at our officials and politicians as being out of touch with marginalized communities, but I will say that he is very much aware of the large task that is at hand and was very receptive to a lot of our ideas that were put forth," he posted.

"Having lived in various neighbourhoods across the city, we were able to speak to him from the perspective of being residents but also as people of influence who wish to use our platforms to elevate the city and subsequently the country."

'No one solution'

The rapper said he believes there is "no one solution" to the issue, but he explained to the mayor the "importance of an empathetic outlook" towards the community that brings people together, rather that isolates them.

The meeting came as Tory also sat down with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau Friday morning to discuss various issues, including gun violence. Tory has said all three levels of government must work together to address local gun crime.

"While we know this is a complex problem and there is no single, quick fix, I know that the prime minister is as committed to finding solutions and keeping people safe as I am and as are the women and men of the Toronto Police Service," the mayor said in a statement. 
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and Toronto mayor John Tory discussed gun violence when they met on Friday. (Chris Young/Canadian Press)

"The Prime Minister pledged in our meeting to doing everything possible to get federal funding to our city as quickly as possible to help us increase our efforts to stop gun and gang violence." 

Kardinal said he hopes his meeting was the first of several with Tory.

"I am no social worker, professional educator or any of these amazing people that spend countless hours, days and years elevating our neighbourhoods — but I'm somebody 'from the area' who has deep roots in the community and who cares," he added, encouraging others to continue to make suggestions and share their own experiences.