Poveiros Community Centre

Founding Date:October 5, 1986
Telephone:416-588-1797

Brief History

Audio Version:

Like many other Portuguese community associations across Canada, Casa dos Poveiros – Varzim Sport Club of Toronto was formed after a soccer team that represented the beautiful coastal town of Póvoa de Varzim. 

Linda Correia, who is the longest standing President of the association, spoke with Luso-Ontario Magazine, in 2008, about the organization’s formation and its growth throughout the years. “It all started playfully”, Linda Correia recalls, “when a few men from Póvoa wanted to form a soccer team. A few women took care of the uniforms and the team was created, in 1986.”

Casa dos Poveiros at the Portugal Day Parade

The association was officially formed and, for a few years, soccer was its only group. Its trophy case includes championships in the defunct Goan League and Portuguese Canadian Soccer League, as well as in the Camoes Cup held each year as part of the Portugal Week celebration promoted by the Alliance of Portuguese Clubs and Associations. 

In 1990, Carlos Miranda and Linda Correia decided to bring a cultural element to the organization by forming a children’s Rancho Folclórico named Vilas e Freguesias. In those days, Varzim did not have its headquarters and, as such, the group practiced at the Europa Catering Hall, on Dundas Street. In 1995, the adult Folklore group was created. Carlos Miranda was the instructor and Linda Correia was part of the group as a dancer and is currently its oldest member. 

Casa dos Poveiros at the Portugal Day Parade

The association serves the poveiros in Toronto but also maintains strong ties with Varzim Sport Club in Portugal and Póvoa de Varzim’s City Hall, as Linda told us. “They never refuse a request from us”, she proudly stated.

The annual picnic is one of the biggest events of the year and it attracts hundreds of attendees. It was at the association’s location on Symington Avenue that Linda Correia also started one of the biggest fundraising events in the community to raise funds for cancer research.

In these changing times, soccer has been buried in the past and the folklore group has been forced to interrupt its activity after the onset of the covid-19 pandemic. Its return has not been announced, but one hopes that such a unique group makes a return to the folklore portfolio of the Portuguese community in Toronto. 

Due to the Covid-19 pandemic, the organization has been forced to abandon its location on Symington and, although still active, it does not currently have physical headquarters.

With files from Luso-Ontario Magazine, 2008
If you notice errors or misrepresentations in the article, please e-mail contact@lusocanada.com
Help us write History. Contribute your story, memory or experience related to this organization by sending an email to contact@lusocanada.com.

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Poveiros Community Centre – Resilience and Optimism

17 February 2024

Linda Correia

Born and raised in Coimbra, Linda Correia is as poveira as any other, a recognition she earned through commitment and dedication that has spanned over three decades. The current president of Poveiros Community Centre has witnessed the best of times and the worst of times. Most of the latter have come recently, particularly as a consequence of the covid-19 pandemic, but she has stood strong, steering the organization onto a new era in order to save it from dissolution.

“I am not a founding member, but I have been a member for over thirty years. I was part of the original Rancho Folclórico”, she began by telling us. “It was one of the best in the community. At some point, we had three Ranchos.”

Linda lived through the heyday of the folk-dance group when it marveled audiences barefoot, dressed in traditional fishermen and women attire. It was also Rancho dos Poveiros, with Correia as member, that first delivered, in Toronto, what is known as Cantar dos Reis within the Portuguese community, a tradition that brings men and women into homes and commercial establishments with songs related to the birth of Jesus. She also witnessed the glorious days of Varzim Sport Club of Toronto, a soccer team that represented the organization with distinction in various leagues and tournaments for over twenty years.

In 2007, after playing various roles within the organization, Linda Correia took its helm, becoming the first President of the Executive Board born outside Póvoa de Varzim. “When I was elected, our headquarters was on Dundas Street, near Dovercourt. One of the first decisions my Board of Directors made was to move to Symington Avenue”, she recalled. The location provided its membership with improved conditions and with plenty of free parking in its vicinity.

Cantares dos Reis at Caldense Bakery

Within her first mandate, Linda Correia founded what was to become the most renowned fundraising event for breast cancer research within the community. It all began in 2008 at the association’s headquarters, but its popularity eventually forced Correia to move the event to LiUNA Local 183’s Gerry Gallagher Hall, a ballroom with capacity for over one thousand guests. In total, Linda’s efforts have helped raise more than half a million dollars for breast cancer research since 2008. (Editor’s note: a separate piece dedicated to the event will be published soon).

In 2011, Linda Correia gave way for other members to lead the organization, but always remained connected as member of the Board and the Rancho. Paula Alto became the new president, followed by Laurentino Esteves and Alexandre Esteves. In 2017, Correia was reelected President, a role that she maintains to this day.

At the time, the organization was experiencing serious challenges. The first consequence of this struggle was the permanent loss of the Rancho, which also became a tremendous loss to the community. “Now, it is very difficult to bring it back. Many members are now part of other ranchos, and it is difficult to get everyone back or get new members. Then, during covid, we couldn’t raise funds, but we had support from the Municipality of Póvoa de Varzim and our landlord, Helder from Caldense Bakery”, Linda Correia said.

Linda Correia is awarded with the Medalha de Mérito das Comunidades Portuguesas

Eventually, the organization was forced to abandon its headquarters, leading some in the community to question its survival. The situation is, however, less gloomy than the optics, as Linda informed: “We continue to organize our events. We still have the support of the Mayor of Póvoa de Varzim and we have our sponsors. The organization remains active, but it doesn’t have a physical location. Currently, we are financially stable and, if we can assemble a group of people who are willing to collaborate, we may return to a physical location.”

The institutional relationship between the association and the Municipality of Póvoa de Varzim is excellent and, as a consequence, so is that of the people who are part of both organizations. It has helped Poveiros Community Centre receive crucial funds from the mayor’s office and build a positive reputation in Portugal. “Mayor Aires Pereira has helped the organization immensely with annual financial contributions and with his presence at many of our events. He is always there for us, and we know we can count on him. He has also become a good friend”, Linda Correia stated.

Although Poveiros Community Centre has become one of the latest casualties in the physical landscape of Toronto’s Portuguese Community, Linda Correia is optimistic about its future, “but we need all the poveiros to get involved and show passion for the organization”, she appealed.

In 2021, Linda Correia was awarded with the Medalha de Mérito das Comunidades Portuguesas by the Government of PortugalPoveiros Community Centre is a member of the Alliance of Portuguese Clubs and Associations of Ontario (ACAPO).

If you notice errors or misrepresentations in the article, please e-mail contact@lusocanada.com
Help us write History. Contribute your story, memory or experience related to this Portuguese community by sending an email to contact@lusocanada.com.