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U of O president calls for 'calm and reflection' in wake of N-word firestorm

As the firestorm over a professor's use of the N-word in class continues to envelop the academic community and beyond, University of Ottawa president and vice-chancellor Jacques Frmont called for calm Thursday.

Jacques Frmont issues open letter to school community

University of Ottawa president and vice-chancellor Jacques Frmont is appealing for calm in the wake of a controversy over a professor's use of the N-word in class. (Quebec Human Rights and Youth Rights Commission)

As the firestorm over a professor's use of the N-word in class continues to envelopthe academic community and beyond, University of Ottawa president and vice-chancellor Jacques Frmont called for calm Thursday.

"I may not have sufficiently underscored the impact on our students of a word whose semantic, historical and connotative burden is so overwhelming as to make it one of the most offensive and least acceptable words in the English language," wroteFrmont in an open letter to the school community.

The university suspended part-time professor Verushka Lieutenant-Duval on Sept. 23after a student complained she had used the N-word during an art and gender class.

Lieutenant-Duvalhas been reinstated, and has since apologized for using the word, but her suspension has caused a deep rifton campus.

Last week, a group of 34 francophone professorsfrom several departmentssignedan open letter defending Lieutenant-Duval. They claimed her academic freedom had been infringed upon, and suggested the term can be used in certain contexts if there iseducational value.

Tension, radicalization

The U of O's student unionand a growing number of other faculty membersexpressed outrage that the professors had defended the use of the word.

"We are currently witnessing a disagreement between two diametrically opposed camps attacking each other through various media channels," wroteFrmont."In such a hostile environment little progress can be made."

"The more tension we have around these social issues, the more radicalized and polarized the discourse becomes, and the more difficult it is to find a viable way forward. Our community deserves better."

'Often, racialized people are told to calm down in these situations. Their calls for racial equality are played off as irrational and infantile in consequence,' from Babacar Faye, president of the University of Ottawa Students' Union. (Radio-Canada)

"Every professor has a duty to establish a healthy and respectful learning environment. Every professor must also moderate discussion that may be at times be difficult in such a way as to ensure the rights of students are never infringed upon," Frmontwrote, calling for "calm and reflection" from everyone involved.

"I encourage those who wish to be heard to speak respectfully as to not further enflame tensions," he wrote, adding: "Make no mistake, my wish is that this debate can take place."

Frmontturned down aninterview request from CBC.

Student union reacts

On social media, Babacar Faye, president of the University of Ottawa Students' Union, wrote that the signal to Black students on campus is that they should quiet down.

"Often, racialized people are told to calm down in these situations. Their calls for racial equality are played off as irrational and infantile in consequence," he wrote.

"The university is missing their duty to protect their students here," Faye wrote. "It feels like we've been dragged by faculty into a national debate on the n word, simply because they were not comfortable in confronting their own privilege and abuse of it."

For more stories about the experiences of Black Canadians from anti-Black racism to success stories within the Black community check out Being Black in Canada, a CBC project Black Canadians can be proud of. You can read more stories here.

A banner of upturned fists, with the words 'Being Black in Canada'.
(CBC)

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