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Advances, struggles in anti-racism work in hockey to be focus of virtual event

An upcoming 鈥渋ncubator'' event on anti-racism work in hockey looks to highlight progress and setbacks within the sport over the past 12 months.
An upcoming 鈥渋ncubator'' event on anti-racism work in hockey looks to highlight progress and setbacks within the sport over the past 12 months.
The one-year look back at the Policy Paper on Anti-Racism in Canadian Hockey will take place March 20 at noon Eastern. It is designed to be an opportunity for coaches, players, parents and other people at all levels of the hockey community to share resources and connect with one another in hopes of advancing a more inclusive and diverse game.
鈥淲e鈥檙e looking to actually get a sense of what is happening on the ground,鈥 said Dr. Sam McKegney, head of the English department at Queen鈥檚 University and one of four main authors of the policy paper.
鈥淲hat are different organizations, teams and leagues doing? It鈥檚 a workshopping opportunity to see what has worked and what hasn鈥檛 worked.鈥
Interested presenters are asked to sign up by Tuesday, March 16, with attendees having until Thursday to request a ticket. Tickets are available for free, but any donations made will benefit Waniska Athletics run by Devin Buffalo, a member of Samson Cree Nation in Alberta who runs goalie clinics for Indigenous youth.
The policy paper was originally published in March 2020, the work of McKegney, Bob Dawson, a Black hockey historian and former Canadian collegiate player, Courtney Szto, an assistant professor in the School of Kinesiology and Health Studies at Queen鈥檚 University, and Mike Auksi, an Anishinaabe-Estonian PhD candidate at McGill University. Auksi had an extensive hockey playing career.
鈥淭his idea that this national winter sport is something that brings us all together is something of a lie. Hockey excludes just as much as it includes,鈥 McKegney said.
One pervasive myth that exists is the nationalistic notion that hockey is 鈥楥anada鈥檚 game,鈥 even though it remains played by a small fraction of the country.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a way of saying 鈥榟ockey belongs to us鈥, and by playing and loving hockey we show that we are the authentic inhabitants of this place,鈥 McKegney said.
鈥淎nd what that does is it erases Indigenous prior occupation. It encourages us to forget about the fact that white settler Canadians are an import on top of this pre-existing collectivity of societies.鈥
McKegney, who is a researcher with the Indigenous Hockey Research Network and a settler scholar of Indigenous literatures, stresses the importance of ensuring that anti-racism work 鈥 whether in the hockey world or elsewhere 鈥斕 isn鈥檛 solely undertaken by the groups who have been historically targeted and underrepresented.
鈥淐ombatting racism is a problem for people who look like me. It鈥檚 not just on the shoulders of BIPOC individuals,鈥 he said. (BIPOC is an acronym meaning Black, Indigenous and People of Colour.)
鈥淚f we want to create a more anti-racist society, that鈥檚 the responsibility of white people to do that.鈥
Much of the policy paper shines a light on Hockey Canada鈥檚 shortcomings in anti-racism work and focuses on Calls to Action 87 to 91 of the Truth and Reconciliation Commission of Canada. These action items focus on sports and reconciliation.
鈥淲e call out Hockey Canada in a pretty significant way,鈥 McKegney said. 鈥淭he reason for that is that Hockey Canada influences the way that the game is understood and encountered by more people in Canada than any other body.鈥
鈥淲e call upon Hockey Canada to celebrate the diverse history of hockey in Canada by disseminating knowledge about Indigenous and racialized players, teams, leagues, and experience,鈥 reads a section in the policy paper on promotion of diversity within the sport.
A following passage reads, 鈥淲e call upon Hockey Canada, and others invested in growing the game (i.e., National Hockey League, Canadian Hockey League etc.), to allocate a percentage of its annual budget to supporting Indigenous hockey in Canada (urban, reserve-based, and remote).鈥
McKegney says that along with Hockey Canada, other major bodies, such as USA Hockey and the NHL itself, often only take half measures to make it appear they are putting in a solid effort in anti-racism work while major structural barriers persist and racist incidents continue to occur on a regular basis under their watch.
鈥淎ll of these major institutions are engaged in the optics of ensuring they look as they are engaging with anti-racism,鈥 he said. 鈥淚 know they鈥檙e big questions, but we want to hold these institutions to account.鈥
Media coverage of racism is another area in which the policy paper is looking to make change.
鈥淭he arena is a permeable membrane,鈥 McKegney said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 not like the arena is somehow distinct from the society in which it exists. I鈥檝e always balked at the media responses to an incident of virulent racism in a hockey space will be like 鈥榬acism seeped into the arena鈥.鈥
鈥淲ell of course it didn鈥檛 鈥榮eep into the arena鈥. It is part of our society and the arena is part of our society. Hockey is part of our society. If our society is racist, then of course racism is going to exist in that space.鈥
For more information on the Anti-Racism Incubator or to read the policy paper itself, visit the link Anti-Racism Incubator for Hockey Tickets, Sat, 20 Mar 2021 at 12:00 PM | Eventbrite
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