Vancouver Sun

Petition launched to change Clan team name at Simon Fraser

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For more than 50 years, Simon Fraser University’s sports teams have played under the name The Clan, to honour the Scottish heritage of the man the school is named after.

But now, amid violent neo-Nazi marches in the United States, some professors and students are sounding the alarm that the name evokes a very different clan — the Ku Klux Klan.

Philosophy professor Holly Andersen has launched a petition to persuade the university to change the name, saying the word “clan” sounds the same spelled with a “C” or a “K” and is associated with a horrible history in the U.S.

She said SFU is the only Canadian school to play in the National Collegiate Athletic Associatio­n, a league dominated by American teams, and it’s disrespect­ful to competitor­s, especially AfricanAme­ricans, to force them to play against a team named The Clan.

“It is not that the term clan is itself racist. The issue is the context: in Canada that term is neutral, but in the U.S. it is as bad as a pretty bad swear word. Quite literally, it is a term that silences normal conversati­on,” she said in an email.

“U.S. teams know we don’t mean that Klan. But they also know that we know what it means in the U.S., and choose to play under that name anyways, which makes us look quite naive and disrespect­ful.”

The university was founded in 1965 and named after Simon Fraser, who explored the Pacific Northwest in the early 19th century. The school embraced Fraser’s Scottish roots with a pipe band and by adopting the nickname “Clan” for its athletic teams.

SFU spokesman Kurt Heinrich said the concern about the team name is not new, but it has been given new impetus by recent events in the U.S. The university is sensitive to the issue, especially given its commitment­s to equity and diversity, he said.

“We will be reviewing the situation in light of recent events, and will consider what further steps, if any, might be taken to avoid possible misunderst­andings relating to the use of this name by our athletic teams,” he said in a statement.

Andersen said a name change could be a positive thing that recognizes the Scottish heritage of the school. She suggested the Tartans, the original name of the student newspaper, or the Pipers, since the pipe band consistent­ly rates among the top few in the world.

The word “clan” in the Scottish tradition means a kinship group, such as the Clan Fraser.

Student wrestler Aliocha Perriard-Abdoh said the name used to represent family and sisterhood to her, but after reading the petition she sees that it’s insensitiv­e and potentiall­y hurtful to AfricanAme­rican competitor­s.

Perriard-Abdoh said she’d like the university to poll student athletes, or students in general, about whether the team name poses a problem.

More than 300 people have signed the online petition. One commenter wrote that when she hears The Clan, she immediatel­y thinks of the KKK, and as a black SFU student, she didn’t think that was fair.

But at least one signatory had a different view: “This is the dumbest thing I’ve ever heard,” he wrote.

Heribert Adam, a SFU sociology professor specializi­ng in comparativ­e racism and multicultu­ralism, suggested the school do a better job of communicat­ing the meaning of the name rather than change it.

He also said a more relevant debate would be a discussion of the role of Scottish settlers in Canadian colonialis­m.

“A petition is useful to create a debate and more knowledge about history,” he said.

 ?? RON HOLE/ SFU ATHLETICS ?? The Clan, Simon Fraser University’s name for its sports teams, is taken from the Scottish term for a group of kin, but a new petition points out that the word may call the KKK to mind.
RON HOLE/ SFU ATHLETICS The Clan, Simon Fraser University’s name for its sports teams, is taken from the Scottish term for a group of kin, but a new petition points out that the word may call the KKK to mind.

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