Sunday, October 19, 2008

"A LAND OF SAVAGES"

Natives decry remark as racist
Former IOC VP says reference 'historical'
JOE FRIESEN
October 18, 2008 - The Globe and Mail.

An aboriginal rights group has reported former International Olympic Committee vice-president Dick Pound to the IOC's ethics committee, accusing him of making racist and intolerant comments about Canada's native peoples and demanding that he be denounced ahead of the 2010 Games in Vancouver.
André Dudemaine, director of LandInSights, a Quebec-based aboriginal advocacy group, said Mr. Pound made comments in an interview with Montreal's La Presse newspaper in August, in which he called 17th-century Canada "a land of savages." The comments were discriminatory and contrary to the IOC code of ethics, Mr. Dudemaine said.
Mr. Pound, speaking in French in a story about the Olympics published Aug. 9, was responding to a question about the potential embarrassment of holding the Games in China, where dissidents had been jailed and a Tibetan uprising crushed.
"We must not forget that 400 years ago, Canada was a land of savages, with scarcely 10,000 inhabitants of European descent, while in China, we're talking about a 5,000-year-old civilization. We must be prudent about our great experience of three or four centuries before telling the Chinese how to manage China," Mr. Pound told journalist Agnès Gruda.
Yesterday, Mr. Pound said he had no intention of making a racist remark, and that it could be clarified by a better understanding of the context.
"I was defending the IOC [and] its choice of Beijing against assertions by the North American media," he said. "Yes, I'm sure that there's probably a more politically correct way of expressing it in this day and age. But I was saying think back to what it was like 200 or 300 years ago before you start lecturing a 5,000-year-old society. It wasn't a comment on the government of whatever the aboriginal peoples might have been. It was a comment about the U.S. in its current incarnation having a solution to everybody's problems."
Mr. Dudemaine said the use of the word "savages" is troubling, and that Mr. Pound's words suggest aboriginal people had no culture or civilization, a myth thoroughly discredited by historians.
"He just hit the nail in the middle of very old prejudices that somehow are still present in Canadian society," he said. "It is exactly this kind of statement by a very respected person that damages all of the progress we wish to make in Canada."
Mr. Pound said a fair reading would indicate this is a manufactured controversy. He said his use of the word "savages" was a historical reference.
"That was the word used at the time in all the literature by the Jesuits who were here. They were just generally les sauvages," he said.
Ghislain Picard, chief of the assembly of First Nations of Quebec, said he was outraged by Mr. Pound's comments, and called on him to resign as Chancellor of McGill University.
"Mr. Pound should himself understand the immense discourtesy of his remarks and offer to resign," the chief said.

The link to the first nations is that our studies prove that the Native Canadians did have a culture.

Summary
Mr. Dick Pound, former International Olympic Committee Vice President, and McGill University Chancellor, said that Canada 400 years ago was "a land of savages". Aboriginal rights groups have accused him as rascist and intolerant.

  • Do you agree with Mr. Pound's statement? Why?
  • What proof do we have that Native Canadians did have a culture?
  • How do you think the Native Canadians feel about this statement?

14 comments:

jlaird said...

I understand what Mr. Pound was trying to say but he shouldn't have used the word 'savages' because it's offensive and hurtful to the first nations people. People may have refered to the native people as savages 400 years ago but it's not okay to use that word today. I don't know if Mr.Pound really meant to offend people with his comment so I'm not sure if he should lose his job over it.

football fraser said...

no because i dont think if he really cared he would not of said savages because it can hurt i dont nn=know if really they could of called first nations savages 400 years ago but it is not ok now

K.Chong said...

I understand that mr.pound is trying to say but he offended them by calling them 'savages' since it is very offencive to them. i also think that he was trying to say that he didnt say it but clearly he did say that the natives were 'savages'.

Q.Gray said...

Mr.Pound does not have the right to call the first nations savages I understoud what he was trying to say but don't use the frase a "land of savages".

Q.Gray said...

Mr.Pound does not have the right to call the first nations savages I understoud what he was trying to say but don't use the frase a "land of savages".

polemidiotis, john said...

I think it was wrong for mr.dick palmer was wrong to acuse the native indians as savages. Althogh some natives are diferent he had no right in calling them saveges.

Bens page said...

Ya the natives were not savages he has no right saying they are because he wasnt there 400 years ago. I think he should not have said savages

sharding said...

I think Mr pound was trying to say that the first nations "were" savages but he dident mean the people now

Joseph Shields said...

I think the Native Canadians feel that 400 yers ago was a bader place than today

HockeyHollis said...

i understood what he said but savage is a mean term.i dont think mr. pound should have lost his job

Kunal K said...

I don't think Mr. Pound can call the first nations savages because that is a little racist.

Aydden.A said...

He should not have savages because he did it showed he didn't really care it could hurt. he shouldn't loos his job over it though.

krisztian fockter said...

I understand what Mr. Pound wanted to say but he shouldnt of hurt them by calling them "saveges." I dont think he bdid it on perpose calling the natives "savages"

Min.Ji said...

I think Mr.Pound shouldn't say that Canada is a land of savages. That is insulting the country and everybody living in Canada. He can steel think that way but he shouldn't say to everybody.