Siwash Rock needs its 'derogatory' name changed, park board commissioner says - Action News
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British Columbia

Siwash Rock needs its 'derogatory' name changed, park board commissioner says

Catherine Evans introduced a motion to kickstart the renaming process earlier this week.

'We shouldn't have a name for any part of our land that is derogatory to the Indigenous people'

Siwash Rock, between Third Beach and the Lions Gate Bridge, is a 32-million-year-old sea stack. (Shutterstock)

A Vancouver Park Board commissioner wants to seeSiwash Rock renamed, saying the Stanley Park landmark has had its "derogatory" title long enough.

Catherine Evans introduced amotion calling for the title change earlier this week.

"The history of Stanley Park includes acts of dispossession and disrespect directed toward the Indigenous people who inhabited it," she wrote.

"An ongoing symbol of disrespect is the name Siwash Rock."

The sea stack, located between Third Beach and the Lions Gate Bridge, is named Slhx7lshin the Squamish language.

Sea stacks are blocks of erosion-resistant rock isolated from the land by sea. Theybegin as part of a headland or sea cliff,later eroded by waves.

Khelsilem, a lecturer at Simon Fraser University, said the landmark is a major point of history and teachings for theSquamish,Musqueam and Tsleil-Waututh people.

"Slhx7lshrefers to 'something standing','standing one'or 'standing person.' It comes from a legend about a man who was transformed into the rock by supernatural beings, teaching people on earth how to be good," he explained.

Several men stand along Siwash Rock around the year 1918. Decades ago, the rock was named "Siwash," the Chinook jargon word for a person of First Nations heritage. (City of Vancouver Archives)

Khelsilemsaid the word Siwash comes from the Chinook jargon,a trade language used at Hudson's Bay ports between Oregon and Alaska decades ago. It's a mixture of the Chinook language, English, French, Salish and several other languages.

"In that language, the word for a Native person isSiwash that's what you would call a Native person. And the wordSiwashis derived from the French word 'sauvage,'which translates to 'savage'in English," he said.

"So, it was called Siwash Rock because it was a Native person ...that's the origin of the history and the language."

For about a 100-year period, he said,the word was used by Indigenous and non-Indigenous peopleand was "ubiquitous with the northwest coast."

But now,Khelsilemsaid, the name is due for change.

"A lot of our communities know of the story of Siwash Rock and recognize it as a place of historical significance and sacredness," he said. "Names on the landscape should reflect the ancient history and the long, meaningful history. It's really important and really valuable and it's exciting to see it happen more and more."

Re-naming process

Vancouver City Coun.Andrea Reimerincluded the sea stack in her own motion, filed earlier this year, calling for several spots in the city to be renamed in order to advance reconciliation.

Evans said she's filed her ownmotion for several reasons: the rock is in the park board's jurisdiction, rather than the city's, and her specific motion could be "a quicker and easier win."

The commissioner said the renaming process will be passed to the Stanley Park Intergovernmental Working Group, should themotion pass at the park board meeting Monday.

The committee wouldeither direct the park board about how to proceed with the change or start the process themselves.Each of the three First Nations in Vancouver Squamish,Musqueam, Tsleil-Waututh hasrepresentationin the group.

Taken in 1889 or 1890, this photo shows a man in a canoe paddling past Siwash Rock. The City of Vancouver says the picture is part of an album originally owned by 'pioneers,' donated to the archives in 2008. (City of Vancouver Archives)

"It would be a further act of colonialism to rename it myself or ask the park board to rename it," Evans said.

The commissionersaid she thinks the motion will succeed because of the collaboration involved and, she said, because of the times.

"I think that when we have the opportunity and the right mechanism to correct a historical wrong, we should do that," she said. "And I think we have that now."

She added: "naming is an issue of power. We shouldn't have a name for any part of our land that is derogatory to the Indigenous people of this land."