The Silhouette - January 30, 2014

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The

Silhouette McMASTER UNIVERSITY’S STUDENT NEWSPAPER

Thursday, January 30, 2014 VOL. 84 NO. 20

SEEING RED A McMaster engineering student group, the Redsuits, has been suspended from Welcome Week and campus activities following the leak of depraved songbook lyrics. What does the student body have to say?

Jemma Wolfe Executive Editor Since making national headlines last week, the now-infamous Redsuit “songbook” continues to be a contentious topic of conversation on campus. On Thursday, Jan. 23, McMaster University announced that it had been made aware of a “highly repugnant” songbook produced by some members of the Redsuits, a faction of the McMaster Engineering Society. Effective immediately, the Redsuits were barred from organizing or participating in any campus events or activities. This sanction includes not being allowed to organize any Welcome Week 2014 activities. The University learned of the songbook early last week and took action. They notified the MES shortly before posting the public announcement on their news webpage, the Daily News. The 35-page document, which details the lyrics to 28 songs and chants, contains material that is extremely offensive and, in the case of explicit references to rape, torture, child abuse and physical assault, describes illegal and inhumane activity. The original document also lists the names of the four students who allegedly compiled it, as well as references to other students and professors; a redacted version without names can be viewed on thesil.ca. Based on the historic usage of these songs at McMaster and other universities across Canada, the students in question most likely did not write any of the lyrics, but rather put them to paper so that “there will always be a written history of these songs, so that they will, God willing, never be forgotten” as the preface section of the songbook details. “Sadly, the small number of students within the organization and the Redsuits they wear have now become symbols of intolerance and a sexist mindset that has no place at the University or in our society,” said Ishwar Puri, dean of engineering, in the Daily News release. In an interview with the Silhouette,

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provost and vice-president (academic) David Wilkinson could not comment on whether or not the individuals named in the document will be penalized in any way. “It’s too early to say. What the appropriate approach will be we’ll determine as we go along [with our investigation],” he said. An external investigator is in the process of being hired, but the University is not willing to divulge further details to protect the integrity of the investigation. However, Wilkinson did identify its direction. “We really want to understand to the best we can what’s really been happening beyond the existence of the book,” he said. “If there are other things that have been going on behind the scenes, what do we need to do, how can we help the student body to make it clear that this kind of behavior isn’t acceptable and how [do we] move on from that?” Student and community responses to the songbook and the ensuing sanctions have been emotional, to say the least. To one fourth-year female engineering student, the University’s sanctions do not reflect the Redsuit culture she knows. Speaking on a condition of anonymity, she discussed her frustrations with the shadow this situation has cast on the Redsuits as a whole. Her experience as a Redsuit has been free of the sexism rampant in the songbook. “I’ve found that [being part of] Redsuits has only made me feel more equal to my male peers in engineering, not less,” she said. “I occasionally feel like there is subtle sexism that all women in academia need to fight but in no way is that limited to or caused by engineering,” she continued. “That book is an artifact of a part of the engineering society culture that is long dead.” Many online reactions to the situation focused on the affect that Welcome Week sanctions will have on incoming first-year engineering students, although the University is reassuring that first-years will not have a sub-par experience. Wilkinson spoke to the difficulties of this decision. “What we’re talking about here are the actions and behaviours of a small

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number of people. Some of the Redsuits will think, for example, that they’re all tarred with this brush, which is unfortunate,” he said. “That’s not the intention; that’s not my view.” The McMaster Students Union supports the University’s current decisions. “Derogatory and degrading chants have no place on this campus,” said MSU president David Campbell in response to the situation. The MES released a collective statement via their website stating that “this book is not, and has never been, distributed or endorsed by the McMaster Engineering Society. The content unequivocally opposes what the MES represents.” As of press time, the MES had not responded to requests for further comment. With the investigation in preliminary stages, there remain many unknowns to the situation. “We don’t know if [the songbook is] being used widely, or at all. It simply exists as an extremely bad joke,” said Wilkinson. His priority moving forwards is to understand the cultural circumstances in which the document was created in the first place. “How does a subculture - even of a small group of people - how does a subculture develop that enables something like that even to exist? Even if it’s a small group within a faculty, it can be poisonous.” @jemma_wolfe

MORE INSIDE: We’re all responsible A4 The songbook leak A7 Student feedback A7 Critiquing Mac’s response A9 Stop censoring satire A9 Visit thesil.ca to see the songbook

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