Medicine Hat News

Blanchet vows to press Trudeau on prof’s use of slur

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A controvers­y over a suspended professor who used a notoriousl­y derogatory word for Black people in class has stirred strong emotions on Parliament Hill, over whether, if ever, the term should be used.

The heated responses came amid a push by the Bloc Quebecois to have the government say unequivoca­lly whether the Liberals, and Prime Minister Justin Trudeau in particular, supported the professor at the heart of the controvers­y.

Bloc Leader Yves-Francois Blanchet said he was unimpresse­d with Trudeau’s response Wednesday to a question in the House of Commons, and planned to press Trudeau anew on Thursday.

Blanchet said those subjected to hateful words deserve compassion and support, but using the term in an educationa­l context isn’t prejudicia­l.

Asked what he would say to those who believe otherwise, Blanchet said: “I have to say that you have very rightfully expressed your sensibilit­y and opinion, which I respect absolutely, but which I do not share.”

The issue has been of particular interest in Quebec, where provincial politician­s have come to the defence of University of Ottawa professor Verushka Lieutenant-Duval. So have Bloc Quebecois MPs on Parliament Hill.

New Democrat Matthew Green blasted the Bloc, saying that defending use of the offensive word under the banner of free speech opens a path for continued racist attacks on Canada’s Black communitie­s.

“For somebody who has had that word hurled against them from the time I was nine years old â ¦ that is a dehumanizi­ng word, it is a form of racial violence,” said Green, who was wearing a Black Lives Matter button on his mask.

“Those that would choose to defend it, what they’re really defending is the prerogativ­e to uphold white supremacy.”

Green party Leader Annamie Paul tweeted that she, not Blanchet, has been targeted with use of the slur “and it stung each time.”

“Before making statements about an issue he clearly doesn’t understand, I invite Mr. Blanchet to contact me so I can explain why the N word remains painful for many,” she wrote on Twitter.

Lieutenant-Duval was suspended after using the term during a classroom discussion last month. She has since apologized.

On Wednesday, the University of Ottawa issued an appeal for campus calm, saying inflamed rhetoric wouldn’t lead to a resolution.

The decision to remove Lieutenant­Duval from the classroom was not taken arbitraril­y, nor was her academic freedom threatened at any point, it said.

 ??  ?? Yves-Francois Blanchet
Yves-Francois Blanchet

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