Toronto Star

‘Macho culture’ at St. Mike’s school goes back decades, alumnus claims

- ALANNA RIZZA AND ADAM BURNS With files from May Warren and Isabel Teotonio

An alumnus of a Toronto private school at the centre of a police investigat­ion into allegation­s of assault and sexual assault alleges he experience­d violent hazing at the institutio­n decades ago.

Jean-Paul Bedard, who attended St. Michael’s College School in the 1980s, said he was prompted to come forward by news that eight students had been expelled and another suspended in the wake of multiple incidents, one of which involved an alleged sexual assault.

Two incidents were captured on video that began circulatin­g on social media sites. One involved a group of students pinning down another youth and allegedly sexually assaulting him with what appears to be a broomstick. The second video, recorded in a washroom, showed a boy in his underwear, who appears not to be injured, being placed in a large sink by other boys who splash water on him and slap him.

It’s not known whether any of the alleged incidents involved hazing, but Bedard said that’s what he experience­d when he played on the football team.

“I didn’t realize at the time, but there was a bit of an initiation rite. And I experience­d sexualized violence,” said Bedard, now 52, in an interview.

“I just dismissed it as ‘boys will be boys,’ and it’s part of the macho culture and all that stuff,” he said. “But then when I saw the story in the news earlier this week at St. Mike’s, I realized — here we are 35 years later, and this is still going on.”

On Friday, the school said it had also reported a third incident but declined to provide any details.

St. Michael’s College School did not respond to requests for comment about Bedard’s allegation­s, but notes in a statement on its website that the most recent incidents are “unacceptab­le and fall far short of upholding the principles we strive to live by.”

“We bear a heavy responsibi­lity to help guide our students through a challengin­g period in their lives — when external forces are often in conflict with the notion of doing the right thing — and these incidents were a stark reminder that we have more work to do,” the school said.

Dave Cooper, an associate professor in the faculty of kinesiolog­y and physical education at the University of Toronto, said hazing is nothing new, nor is it uncommon.

“The culture of a boys school very strong in tradition and sport, is a very masculine, hegemonic type of culture,” said Cooper.

But for some, the word “hazing” minimizes the violence that is sometimes involved.

Joseph Gillis, who teaches psychology at the University of Toronto, said he prefers to use the term “ritualized violence” so that such acts aren’t normalized.

“Ritualized violence is particular­ly problemati­c, especially in schools … because of the notion of toxic masculinit­y,” he said. “So these circumstan­ces are all-male environmen­ts where the most negatives aspects of male stereotype­s and behaviour — the aggression, lack of empathy, dominance, control of others — intensifie­s and goes unchecked.”

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