Lethbridge Herald

Kainai student chosen McGill valedictor­ian

Tomas Jirousek led fight to drop offensive team name

- Morgan Lowrie

AKainai First Nation student who led the fight to convince McGill University to drop an offensive name for its men’s varsity sports teams used his speech as valedictor­ian to call on his fellow graduates to fight systemic discrimina­tion.

Tomas Jirousek, 22, and a graduate of Catholic Central High School in Lethbridge, was named valedictor­ian for the school’s faculty of arts, making him one of the few Indigenous students to receive the honour.

While convocatio­n was shortened and moved online due to COVID-19, Jirousek said he used his short speech to reference the Black Lives Matter movement and other fights against injustice.

“I think McGill students in particular are well-situated to challenge systemic racism and systemic oppression­s which persist in our communitie­s,” he said in a phone interview.

He said that while he was thrilled to be chosen, he also felt sad to think about all the other bright students who never got the same recognitio­n.

“A couple of decades ago, the Indian Act wouldn’t have allowed an Indigenous student to go to McGill without losing their status,” he said.

Jirousek, a member of the rowing crew, was at the forefront of a student campaign to get McGill to drop the name “Redmen” for its sports teams, which Indigenous students described as offensive and alienating.

McGill announced last year it would drop the name after a fierce debate that revealed deep divisions between students and alumni who defended the nearly centuryold name, and those who opposed it.

Even though the team name was originally meant to refer to team colours, an associatio­n with Indigenous people was made as early as the 1950s, when team members were referred to using derogatory terms.

“‘Redmen’ is widely acknowledg­ed as an offensive term for Indigenous peoples, as evidenced by major English dictionari­es,” Principal Suzanne Fortier wrote in a statement announcing the decision.

“While this derogatory meaning of the word does not reflect the beliefs of generation­s of McGill athletes who have proudly competed wearing the University’s colours, we cannot ignore this contempora­ry understand­ing.”

The men’s varsity teams will be known simply as the

McGill teams until a new name is chosen.

Jirousek, who is heading to law school at the University of Toronto in the fall, said his experience taught him that racism is still very much alive — but also that there are good people willing to fight it.

During his campaign, he said it was jarring to receive messages containing racial slurs and saying he only got into McGill because he was Indigenous.

“That kind of undercutti­ng — not only of me and the stance I’ve taken on the Redmen name, but a personaliz­ed attack on my intellect as an Indigenous person, the ability of an Indigenous person like myself to get into McGill — that hits home,” said Jirousek.

But just as importantl­y, he said he was encouraged by the massive support he and other Indigenous students received from nonIndigen­ous allies, without whom, he said, the name change would not have been possible.

“We’ve come a long way towards reconcilia­tion, and that makes me proud,” he said.

He said McGill is planning an in-person convocatio­n next year, which will give him the chance to deliver his full speech.

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