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We are facing a human crisis unlike any
we have experienced
Amina J. Mohamed
UN Deputy-Secretary-General
”


We are QUnited.
And we are here to help.
In today's landscape, it can be easy to get lost in the numbers and statistics of the COVID-19 pandemic. It may be hard to conceptualize that behind each statistic is an individual, a family, and a community. Additionally, with the wealth of information on the pandemic, information overload can result in more stress than education.
You are not alone.
QUnited aims to share stories of Queen's University students of various backgrounds going through the pandemic to help readers connect with those undergoing similar experiences. We also provide a centralized resource database for readers to help educate and inform themselves on the events that colour life today.
Realizing the Impacts of the Virus
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Queen’s University is situated on traditional Anishinaabe and Haudenosaunee Territory. To acknowledge this traditional territory is to recognize its longer history, one predating the establishment of the earliest European colonies. It is also to acknowledge this
territory’s significance for the Indigenous peoples who lived, and continue to live, upon it – people whose practices and spiritualities were tied to the land and continue to develop in relationship to the territory and its other inhabitants today. The Kingston Indigenous community continues to reflect the area’s Anishinaabek and Haudenosaunee roots. There is also a significant Métis community and there are First Peoples from other Nations across Turtle Island present here today




















