Saskatoon StarPhoenix

EX-PROF LOSES TITLE OVER POSTS.

- Alanna Rizza

An Ontario university has stripped a former professor of an honorary title after he wrote social media posts about Indigenous people that the school described as inflammato­ry and vulgar.

Brock University said its senate committee voted unanimousl­y last week to strip former political science professor Garth Stevenson of his “emeritus” designatio­n, which was given to him when he retired in 2012.

“The move came after a series of vulgar, inflammato­ry statements, aimed at the Indigenous community and others, were posted last week on Stevenson’s social media pages,” the university in St. Catharines said in a statement.

Stevenson did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment but told the St. Catharines Standard that he apologizes for the posts, which included comments on the City of Victoria’s removal of a statue of Canada’s first prime minister, Sir John A. Macdonald.

“While my language was intemperat­e and offensive and I apologize for it, I think the campaign to destroy the reputation of Sir John A. Macdonald is entirely unjustifie­d and that was the point that I was trying to make,” Stevenson wrote to the newspaper.

In his statement to the paper, Stevenson also called the emeritus designatio­n a “meaningles­s title.”

“Although it might deprive me of the right to borrow books from their library, I am sure I can live without that,” he wrote.

In one now-deleted tweet cited in news reports, Stevenson wrote that Victoria was removing the statue of Macdonald “to appease some snivelling aboriginal­s who probably never did a day’s work in their lives.”

Macdonald’s role in establishi­ng residentia­l schools has made him a polarizing figure in reconcilia­tion efforts with Indigenous Peoples.

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