McGill dumps Redmen team name after calls from Indigenous community - Action News
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Indigenous

McGill dumps Redmen team name after calls from Indigenous community

Montreal's McGill University has announced it will change the name of its men's varsity sports teams the Redmen after Indigenous students, faculty and staff said the name is discriminatory.

Montreal university finally changes name after lobbying effort

For months, students, faculty and staff have been pushing the university to change the Redmen name, including by holding a protest on campus. (Jessica Deer/CBC)

Montreal's McGill University has announced it will change the name of its men's varsity sports teams the Redmen after Indigenous students, faculty and staff said the name is discriminatory.

Suzanne Fortier, the principal and vice-chancellor of McGill, announced the decision byemail to students Friday morning, sayingit was based on new principles of commemoration and renaming that the university established in December2018.

"Today, 'Redmen'is widely acknowledged as an offensive term for Indigenous peoples, as evidenced by major English dictionaries," said Fortier in a statement.

She said the derogatory meaning does not reflect the beliefs of generations ofMcGill athletes.

"We cannot ignore this contemporary understanding. Intention, however benign, does not negate prejudicial effect," she said.

"Inclusion and respect are at the core of our university's principles and values; pejoratives run contrary to who we are as a community."

She said that a steering committee would be set up to determine a new name for the teamsthrough consultation.

The teams are expected to be sporting a new name by the beginning of the 2020 season, according toFabrice Labeau, the interim deputy provost of Student Life and Learning.

"What we will be doing is setting together a process to find a new name that, hopefully, the whole community will be able to stand behind," Labeau said in an interview Thursday on CBC Montreal'sRadio Noon.

A spokesperson for Prime Minister Justin Trudeausaid the PMO supports McGill's decision.

"All Canadians have a role to play in achieving reconciliation. It is an issue that we must all address in real and concrete ways," said press secretary Matt Pascuzzo in an emailed statement.

"We commend actions taken by institutions and communities across Canada to advance reconciliation, including the implementation of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission Calls to Action."

Name dates back to 1920s

Since the late 1920s, the men's teams have been known as the Redmen. According to the university, the namecame from colours worn by the team. However, Indigenous symbols, connotationsand unofficial nicknames were propagated by the press and fans.

Using the name "Indians" to refer to men's teams began as early as 1938, and, in the mid-1960s, women's teams began being referred to as "Squaws" or "Super Squaws."

Images of Indigenous people were also found onMcGill jerseys and helmets for the football and men's hockey teams between 1981 and 1991.

A logo featuring a headdress appeared on the football and hockey teams' gear in the 1980s. (McGill University)

Campaign to change the name

The university's task force on Indigenous studies and Indigenous education released a report in 2017 in response to the Truth and Reconciliation Commission's calls to action.

The task force issued itsown recommendations, including one to change the varsity teams' name within one or two years of the report.

Tomas Jirousek, a third-year political science studentand member of the Kainai First Nation in Alberta, has been campaigning for the name change for over a year.

"It's an incredible feeling," Jirousek said.

I'm quite excited to see that they took the stance they did.- Tomas Jirousek, McGill student who campaigned for name change

"I was quite worried that this was another delay a stalling tactic by the administration to wait out the current student representatives and activists in order to not have to make a decision while these students are still here.

"So I'm quite excited to see that they took the stance they did."

In October, he helped organize an on-campus demonstration and online petition that garnered more than 10,000 signatures in support of the name change.

Students climbed onto the roof of McGill's Leacock building on March 27 and dropped a 25-foot-long banner down its side as part of the campaign to change the name. (Khando Langri)

Jirousek is a varsity athlete on the men's rowing team at the university. He said heknows first-hand the negative impact the name has on Indigenousathletes at McGill.

"It can be isolating. It can be incredibly difficult to look into school yearbooks and see Redmen, squaw, Indian all used in conjunction, and at the same time seeing these gruesome depictions of Indigenous people," he said.

"It hurts. It makes it feel like you are not really a part of the McGill family."

'Edmonton Eskimos could take a lesson from this': minister

At a news conference on Friday in Toronto, Minister of CrownIndigenous RelationsCarolyn Bennett called the change a"huge success."

"I think that it really comes from the students, and from their understanding of their role in reconciliation," she said.

"For all of us, that means the Edmonton Eskimos could take a lesson from this, and we have to make sure that, coast to coast to coast, when people are hurt, you have to listen. That name hurt people, so we want to say congratulations to McGill University."

Not everyone is happy about the name change

Salim Brahimi is a McGill graduate who was on the soccer team before graduating in 1989, and coached the men's soccer team until 2004.

"It comes to a case of an easy target for the sake of political correctness without really making an impactful change on the ground," he said.

"Some people are going to feel good about this, but did it do anything without alienating a whole part of the community?"

Salim Brahimi (Submitted by Salim Brahimi)

He said he would have preferred if energy had beenspent on "a very concrete cause" that advancedtruth and reconciliation.

"That would have been a lot better than the way it happened," said Brahimi. "This was just, you know, an easy step for people in the decision-making seat."

He said the name is different from other sports teams' names and mascotrythat have been debated, such asthe Washington Redskins and Edmonton Eskimos.

"In those cases, clearly, those names have Indigenous connotations," Brahimi said. "It's not what we're talking here. This is a different [situation]."

With files from Jay Turnbull