Volume No. 33 Issue No. 22
TRIBUNE THE mcgill pX
CURIOSITY DELIVERS
Published by the Tribune Publication Society
The Vagina Monologues Continuing an incomplete Dialogue P 20
Martlets win National Championship Fouracres Scores winner in 2OT p 24
@mcgilltribune • www.mcgilltribune.com
Tuesday, March 18, 2014
SSMU rescinds decision mandating Farnan apology Sara Cullen Contributor
(Wendy Chen / McGill Tribune)
SSMU Council has rescinded its decision to mandate VicePresident Internal Brian Farnan to issue a public apology for an Obama .GIF included in a listserv. The previous decision, which the Students’ Society of McGill University (SSMU) Council made in a confidential session on Dec. 5, was revoked by Council last Thursday. Farnan’s apology provoked widespread debate about equity and the decision-making process in SSMU. Élie Lubendo, Services Representative and mover of the motion explained the background to the motion. “I feel that we need to realize that we made a mistake, then move on from there,” Lubendo said. “Then we need to start educating students [....] and start rebuilding with equity.” David Benrimoh, medicine representative, voiced concern that rescinding the apology would negatively affect those who brought about the complaint. “[We] are going to be sending a message to those who did feel marginalized and oppressed by the .GIF that […] public opinion rules the equity process and that there is no real protection
for them,” he said. Lubendo said the issue lay in the form of a public apology and not in the microaggression itself. He said that Farnan’s apology was a poor example for the undergraduate student body and created more negative public backlash than the initial use of the Obama .GIF. Delane Efua Boakye, an executive of the Black Students’ Network (BSN) spoke in favour of the motion and related the student backlash to the public opinion of the SSMU-funded BSN. Although the BSN did not take part in the complaint filed against Farnan, some students wrongly blamed the BSN for the controversy. “We often deal with the tension of ‘Why does the BSN exist?, ‘Why do we need a BSN?’”she said. “When we have issues like this, it further delegitimizes our organization because people feel that we’re looking for something to do, [that] we’re raising complaints for the sake of doing it.” Boakye said the motion would attempt to counter the issues created by the apology. “[There is a] line between offering an apology to an individual who was hurt and offering a public apology,” Boakye said. “[The public apology] decreased See “SSMU Council” on p. 3
U P TO %
70 OFF
MAR
0th CH 1
th
- 29