Ottawa Citizen

Killer’s poems taken down

PARLIAMENT

- TERESA WRIGHT

OTTAWA • Two poems written by a man who killed an Indigenous woman have been removed from the parliament­ary poet laureate website.

The poems by Stephen Brown included one about a sex worker, eliciting a chorus of public concern, including from Manitoba MLA Nahanni Fontaine, who said they showed disrespect toward his victim and other missing and murdered Indigenous women and girls.

Brown, who changed his name from Steven Kummerfiel­d, and his friend Alex Ternowetsk­y were convicted of manslaught­er in the 1995 beating death of Pamela George, a First Nations woman.

Brown was sentenced to 61/2 years in prison and was granted parole in 2000. He now lives in Mexico.

Two of Brown’s poems were posted to the Library of Parliament website in 2017 when George Elliott Clarke was the parliament­ary poet laureate.

They were included in a selection of poems chosen by Clarke during his tenure as a “poems of the month” space on the website to showcase Canadian poetry. Clarke likened Brown’s works those of American beat poets Jack Kerouac and Allen Ginsberg and referred to him has an “avant-garde poet” who is a “singular intelligen­ce and artisan among English-Canadian poets.”

Fontaine took to social media, calling on Heritage Minister Steven Guilbeault to step in and have the poems removed.

Daniel Savoie, a spokesman for Canadian Heritage, issued a statement Monday saying neither Guilbeault nor the department play any role in the poet laureate program or its associated website.

Heather Lank, the parliament­ary librarian, recommende­d the poems be removed and the Speakers of the Senate and the House of Commons agreed, said Tanya Sirois, a communicat­ions adviser for the Library of Parliament.

“The Library of Parliament has received numerous complaints regarding the presence of work by Stephen Brown on the parliament­ary poet laureate website,” Sirois said Monday. She later added Clarke also supported the removal of the poems.

Brown’s works on the site were entitled “Plaza Domingo” and “Alejandra.” The subject and opening line of “Alejandra” is a woman referred to as “la pornai,” or a sex worker in ancient Greece. At one point in the poem, it says, “I follow her.”

Fontaine said she interprete­d this line to mean the author was stalking the woman and said she found it “unacceptab­le” for a Canadian parliament­ary website to be promoting a convicted murderer writing about stalking vulnerable women.

On Monday, she thanked those who joined with her in calling for Brown’s poems to be removed. “Indigenous women, MMIWG families will not tolerate that and will not put up with that,” Fontaine said.

 ?? JOHN WOODS / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES ?? Manitoba MLA Nahanni Fontaine, above, says two poems written by killer Stephen Brown showed disrespect toward his victim, Pamela George.
JOHN WOODS / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Manitoba MLA Nahanni Fontaine, above, says two poems written by killer Stephen Brown showed disrespect toward his victim, Pamela George.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada