Western University has come out swinging against what it calls a “repugnant” misuse of the Black Lives Matter slogan that was shared online over the weekend, when defiant students held a homecoming bash.
In a statement Tuesday, a school executive said Western was made aware “of a number of images, symbols and slogans that were shared by Western community members through social media over the past weekend.”
Specifically cited were “images of a banner with the slogan ‘Western Lives Matter,’” with school vice-president Jana Luker saying it “has produced outrage and backlash within our community.”
The image showed four Western-shirted young men posing in front of a sheet-like sign, with Western Lives Matter written across it in the school’s trademark purple colour.
Equating the student upheaval (stemming from) the Homecoming date change to the Black Live Matter movement … is the epitome of ignorance and privilege
Black Lives Matter is an international movement against violence and racism toward black people, one that has especially been fuelled by recent police shootings of African-Americans in the United States.
“‘Black Lives Matter’ is an important human rights movement and a powerful response to systemic racism that permeates our society,” Luker, vice-president for student experience, said in the statement. “Co-opting the ‘Lives Matter’ phrase in this way is repugnant and trivializes the validity of this international cause and network.”
The school is investigating whether those involved violated its student code of conduct, Luker wrote.
Thousands of Western students held an unsanctioned homecoming celebration over the weekend, after the school rescheduled the event to three weeks later in a bid to nix unruly and booze-fueled behaviour.
In a video posted to Facebook, the head of Western’s undergraduate student government, Eddy Avila, said he could not let the offending banner go unrecognized.
“Equating the student upheaval (stemming from) the Homecoming date change to the Black Live Matter movement — which represents years of pain, oppression and violence — is the epitome of ignorance and privilege. And it essentially belittles their entire movement. We have to be aware that some people’s lives depend on protest, that some are fighting for some very basic human right. We have to be aware of the social and historical context of struggle,” Avila said.
“Never be afraid to stand up for what you believe in,” he added, but cautioned students to “use your voice wisely.” He said the banner affected how Western students are viewed.
London has come under a harsh national spotlight recently for behaviour with racial overtones, including when the N-word was hurled on a public street at a black actor playing in a stage production about American civil rights leader Martin Luther King Jr., and again when a Muslim woman was spat upon in a supermarket and an attempt made to pull off the hijab covering her head.
London Free Press
Related
- Fan in gorilla suit and ‘All Lives Matter’ T-shirt runs onto field during Lions-Bears game in Chicago
- White Lives Matter declared a hate group in the U.S.: ‘This is standard white supremacist stuff’
- Gun and Confederate flag-toting White Lives Matter protesters rally outside Houston NAACP
No comments:
Post a Comment