In this seven-minute audio clip, long-time Toronto-based anti-psychiatry activist Don Weitz (whose stories are featured in Chapter 5 of Resisting the State: Canadian History Through the Stories of Activists) talks about the founding in 1977 of the first enduring group of, by, and for psychiatric survivors in Ontario. Inspired by an earlier trip to learn about the Mental Patients’ Association in Vancouver, and ultimately named for Judi Chamberlin’s book about non-psychiatric alternatives called On Our Own, the group last for around two decades.
[audio:weitz_founding.mp3]Stay connected with Talking Radical!
Recent Updates
Learning from Movements – Florence Stratton
March 3rd, 2025
(Originally published at The Media Co-op.) Florence Stratton has been involved in social jus[...]Learning from Organizers -- Emma Jackson
December 10th, 2024
(Originally published at The Media Co-op.) Emma Jackson is an organizer, trainer, and occasi[...]Learning from Organizers – Tara Ehrcke
September 24th, 2024
Tara Ehrcke of Victoria, BC, was initially politicized as part of the global justice movement i[...]Learning from Organizers -- Lorraine Lam
July 26th, 2024
As part of Toronto’s Shelter and Housing Justice Network (SHJN), Lorraine Lam is active in stru[...]Learning from Organizers – Kerri Claire Neil
June 6th, 2024
Kerri Claire Neil (she/her) is a community organizer based in St. John's, Ktaqamkuk (Newfoundla[...]
Pingback: Don Weitz | talkingradical.ca