Truro News

Vancouver’s Siwash Rock name disrespect­ful to First Nations, says park board

- BY ELIZABETH LEIGHTON

The Siwash Rock in Vancouver’s Stanley Park could be renamed if First Nations agree its name is disrespect­ful to Aboriginal Peoples.

The park board voted unanimousl­y Wednesday night to work with Coast Salish Nations to determine if the distinctiv­e rock should be renamed, saying it is taking a first step towards righting “acts of dispossess­ion and disrespect.”

Commission­er Catherine Evans proposed the motion and said the Stanley Park intergover­nmental working group, which includes representa­tives from the Squamish, Musqueam and Tsleil-Waututh First Nations, will consider the change.

Evans said the working group, formed about three years ago to oversee the master planning and stewardshi­p of the park, is the right organizati­on to deal with the issue but renaming the rock might not top its agenda because its members are extremely busy.

“Listening to (Squamish) Chief Ian Campbell, it seems that they are going to welcome the change. The challenge of course is there is more than one Indigenous language spoken among the three nations. We’ll see what happens,” Evans said.

The massive 18-metre basalt sea stack stands prominentl­y on the park’s northwest shore near the entrance to Vancouver’s harbour.

The word siwash is a derogatory term for an Indigenous person and comes from Chinook jargon, which was the first method of communicat­ion between Europeans and Coast Salish peoples. Siwash is the Chinook interpreta­tion of the French word sauvage, or savage.

The motion adopted by the board called the name an “ongoing symbol of disrespect.”

Evans said the name is an “historic wrong,” but it was only last

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? People stop to take photograph­s of Siwash Rock along the Stanley Park seawall in Vancouver, B.C.
CP PHOTO People stop to take photograph­s of Siwash Rock along the Stanley Park seawall in Vancouver, B.C.

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