National Post (National Edition)

Editor quits over support for cultural appropriat­ion

Niedzvieck­i’s ‘piece offended and hurt readers’

- SEBASTIAN LECK National Post The Canadian Press

The editor of the Writers’ Union of Canada’s magazine has resigned after complaints over an article he wrote in which he said he doesn’t believe in cultural appropriat­ion.

Hal Niedzvieck­i, editor of Write — a publicatio­n for the union’s members — published an opinion piece in the spring 2017 issue titled Writer’s Prompt. In the article, in an issue dedicated to indigenous writing, Niedzvieck­i wrote: “In my opinion, anyone, anywhere, should be encouraged to imagine other peoples, other cultures, other identities.

“I’d go so far as to say there should even be an award for doing so — the Appropriat­ion Prize for best book by an author who writes about people who aren’t even remotely like her or him.”

He went on to argue that Canadian literature remains “exhausting­ly white and middle class” because writers are discourage­d from writing about people and places they don’t know.

A sociologic­al term, cultural appropriat­ion is used to describe the adoption of elements or practices of one cultural group by members of another.

On Wednesday, the Writer’s Union of Canada issued an apology for the piece, announcing Niedzvieck­i’s resignatio­n and pledging to review the magazine’s policies.

“The Writer’s Prompt piece offended and hurt readers, contributo­rs to the magazine and members of the editorial board,” said the statement. “We apologize unequivoca­lly. We are in the process of contacting all contributo­rs individual­ly.

“The intention behind the magazine is to offer space for honest and challengin­g discussion and to be sincerely Hal Niedzvieck­i, editor of write. encouragin­g to all voices. The Union recognizes that intention is not enough, and that we failed in execution in this instance.

“We offer the magazine itself as a space to examine the pain this article has caused, and to take this conversati­on forward with honesty and respect,” the statement concluded.

Neither Niedzvieck­i nor John Degen, the executive director of the Writers’ Union of Canada, responded to repeated requests for comment Wednesday.

Social media backlash against the piece began Tuesday from Write contributo­rs and members of the Writer’s Union. Alicia Elliott, an indigenous Tuscarora author of a piece published in the same issue, tweeted out photos of Niedzvieck­i’s op-ed and said she was happy to receive her copy of the magazine “until I saw this.”

“It felt like an intimate betrayal,” she said. Niedzvieki had edited her own piece about cultural appropriat­ion, which Elliott said made it “especially hurtful.”

She said she believes problem isn’t that white, middle-class writers are afraid to write about other cultures, but rather that they appropriat­e other cultures too frequently.

“Their voices are lifted up, while the people who are from those cultures are pushed down and kept outside the industry.”

Joshua Whitehead, a PhD student at the University of Calgary who also contribute­d to the magazine, tweeted, “this is shocking — wish I knew this was going in before I submitted.”

Nikki Reimer, a member of Write magazine’s editorial board, announced her resignatio­n in a blog post published to her website on Wednesday.

She said she “would have strongly objected to this piece had I seen it prior to publicatio­n.”

“I can’t, should not, and will not speak for any indigenous writer, but what I do attempt to do, in my life and in my work, is to listen to others who do not move through the world with my level of privilege,” she wrote in her post.

“Canada has a long history of settler-colonialis­m and of cultural and physical appropriat­ion … I vehemently disagree with the notion that cultural appropriat­ion is not real — it exists and it causes real harm.”

Niedzvieck­i is the founder of the magazine Broken Pencil. He is also the author of several fiction and nonfiction books, including The Peep Diaries: How We’re Learning to Love Watching Ourselves and Our Neighbors.

In a series of tweets sent out on Wednesday afternoon, the Writers’ Union said they are reviewing policies across the organizati­on and plan to address concerns about Write magazine at the organizati­on’s OnWords Conference held in Vancouver this June. their own Caribbean communicat­ions problem this week when it was revealed NDP backbenche­r Rob Altemeyer rang up a $5,000 cellphone bill during a wedding vacation in Mexico this year.

Altemeyer said Wednesday he thought he was using the hotel’s wireless network instead of his cell signal and never received a message from his cellphone provider — Bell-MTS — that he was using internatio­nal roaming fees.

“I am talking with the service provider to see if we can come to an understand­ing on resolving it,” Altemeyer said.

The bill, like all other monthly invoices, was sent directly to the Members’ Allowances Office — the legislatur­e bureau that oversees politician­s’ spending accounts, Altemeyer said.

“The bills have already been paid by the time I see what the amount is ... and this month I found out — after the bill was paid — that it was a lot more than it usually is.”

Bell-MTS said all users are warned of roaming fees when they cross internatio­nal borders.

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