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Searching for Serafim

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The life and legacy of Serafim "Joe" Fortes, a trailblazing Black lifeguard, who became a cultural icon in a racist society Searching for Serafim is a layered exploration of the life of Serafim "Jo...
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  • 06 May 2025
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The life and legacy of Serafim "Joe" Fortes, a trailblazing Black lifeguard, who became a cultural icon in a racist society

Searching for Serafim is a layered exploration of the life of Serafim "Joe" Fortes. A Trinidad native who arrived on the shores of Canada in 1885, Fortes was heralded as a hero in Vancouver for saving dozens of people from drowning as the city's first lifeguard, and his funeral drew the largest crowd ever recorded in the city's history. Since his passing, Fortes has been commemorated with a postage stamp and local buildings named in his honour. Yet, little has been discussed about how he navigated an openly white supremacist society as an Afro Latino man.

In Searching for Serafim, author Ruby Smith Díaz seeks to unravel the complicated legacy of a local legend to learn more about who Fortes was as a person. She draws from historical documents to form an insightful critique of the role that settler colonialism and anti-Black racism played in Fortes's publicized story and reconstructs his life, from over a century later, through a contemporary Black perspective, weaving poetry and personal reflections alongside archival research. The result is a moving and thought-provoking book about displacement, identity, and dignity.

With black-and-white photos.

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Price: $18.95
Pages: 144
Publisher: Arsenal Pulp Press
Imprint: Arsenal Pulp Press
Publication Date: 06 May 2025
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781551529752
Format: Paperback
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE / Cultural & Ethnic Studies / American / African American & Black Studies, BIOGRAPHY & AUTOBIOGRAPHY / African American & Black, HISTORY / Canada / Provincial, Territorial & Local / British Columbia (BC), SOCIAL SCIENCE / Race & Ethnic Relations
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"Searching for Serafim is an exquisitely written book about a figure both emblematic and enigmatic. Ruby Smith Diaz powerfully illuminates both the necessity and limits of archival research, recovering Black life from white 'celebration' and critically reimagining a past that speaks to the urgencies of our present and future."
—David Chariandy, author of Brother and Soucouyant

"We have been waiting a century for this book, for Ruby Smith Diaz to honour and appreciate Serafim 'Joe' Fortes, a man who carried a city's authoritarian affection on his shoulders. Using diverse forms and modes of discourse, from deeply researched biography to engaged personal narrative to lucid poetry, Searching for Serafim is, quite simply, the single most important work on Fortes and a stunning contribution to the literature of Vancouver. This is the book to remember him by and through which we might understand how Blackness can survive and resonate on these shores."
—Wayde Compton, author of The Outer Harbour

"This is a book of astounding artistry, anchored in the rigorous and world-building genealogy of the Black feminist radical tradition. In Searching for Serafim, Diaz honours the life and legacy not only of Serafim Fortes but of Black and Indigenous ancestors on these lands and daylights transnational struggles against empire and white supremacy over five centuries. This must-read book skillfully weaves archives, narrative, and poetry while calling on us to imagine our lives and liberation anew."
—Harsha Walia, author of Border and Rule: Global Migration, Capitalism, and the Rise of Racist Nationalism

"Gorgeously layered, Ruby Smith Diaz's Searching for Serafim deftly interweaves the remarkable life of Serafim Fortes with a powerful interrogation of the conditions structuring Black diasporic life in Canada."
—Robyn Maynard, author of Policing Black Lives and co-author of Rehearsals for Living

"The legacy of Serafim Fortes is immense, and Ruby Smith Diaz is to be commended for bringing to light this multilayered history by documenting the crucial role Fortes played in early twentieth-century Vancouver's development. In Searching for Serafim, Diaz places Fortes at the centre of Black BC history, sharing his riveting transnational story and how he changed British Columbia."
—Afua Cooper, professor of Black and women's history, University of Toronto

Ruby Smith Díaz is an Afro Latina multidisciplinary artist, educator, and award-winning body-positive personal trainer. Her experiences growing up in a migrant, poor, single-parent family in amiskwaciy (Edmonton, AB) have inspired her to dedicate her life's work to exploring and addressing issues of equity and social justice. Ruby currently resides on the unceded territories of the Stz'uminus peoples (Ladysmith, BC).