Canadian Inuit leader reflects on report of CFL team changing name
Natan Obed doesn’t feel that he, himself, made the Edmonton football team change its name.
But the national Inuit leader — whose 2015 op-ed in The Globe and Mail brought the discussion into the national spotlight ahead of the team’s Grey Cup victory — says if the reports are to be believed, Inuit can now move on to tackling other issues without this “distraction.”
CBC News has not been able to verify the reports from TSN and Postmedia suggesting Edmonton’s CFL club has come to an internal decision to change its name, with an announcement expected as early as this week.
A team spokesperson said, as of Saturday, there was no update regarding the name change.
But if the reports are true, it brings an end to a bitterly divisive debate which has played out not only in Southern Canada, but among Inuit across the country.
Repairing relationships
Support and opposition for the team’s name across Inuit Nunangat largely depended on demographics. Inuit in the Western Arctic were generally more supportive of the name, along with older Inuit; while those further East, and the younger generations, predominantly supported a change.
Duane Smith, the chair of the Inuvialuit Regional Corporation — and an ITK board member — told Sportsnet radio earlier this month many of his constituents found pride in Edmonton’s team name.
The issue even reached Nunavut’s Legislative Assembly in February, where cabinet minister Lorne Kusugak told naysayers to “take a Valium” during his member’s statement.
Obed acknowledged there will be some who are upset with him over the reported outcome, comparing it to former Nunavut MP Nancy Karetak Lindell’s voting in favour of same-sex marriage legislation, despite strong opposition from her constituents at the time.
“When the name changes, I will be a little bit more at peace and I hopefully will be able to now start repairing some of these relationships that have been broken through this discourse,” Obed said, adding the issue for him was never over what Inuit think of the term, but rather about a business using it as a moniker.
Other issues to focus on
During a phone-in show on CBC Nunavut’s Tausunni radio program on Friday, one caller suggested there are more important issues facing Inuit than a football team’s name.
Indeed, Obed agreed. But said this issue was important, too.
Obed also said this issue proved Inuit have a voice for change in this country.
“The fact that this name can change I think also shows that when we mobilize and when we use our voices and we stand up for things that we do right,” he said.
“And it’ll be hard. And our own community may not be with us at all steps along the way. But we’re doing things that matter for Inuit, and for all Inuit coming in the future.”
Ending the use of the term in non-Inuit discourse
Asked if this (reported) decision from the CFL team is the turning point for non-Inuit to stop using the term altogether in social discourse, Obed said “Yes.”
“That is a huge victory for Inuit and for Inuit self-determination,” he said.
“If Inuit within our communities want to use that term to describe themselves or describe their friends, or use the term, that is the pure discretion of Inuit and Inuit alone.
“I don’t want my children being called [that term] by government, or by anyone that they interact with. And this decision by the Edmonton football team will make sure that it is not socially acceptable anywhere, for any non-Inuit, to use that term for any reason to describe us.”
Related stories from around the North:
Canada: ‘Start by changing your team name’: Inuk MP responds to Edmonton Eskimos post referencing racism, CBC News
Finland: Eskimo-branded ice cream may get name change in Finland, Yle News
Sweden: Sami in Sweden start work on structure of Truth and Reconciliation Commission, Eye on the Arctic
United States: COVID-19 pandemic raises hard questions about health disparities, says Int’l Inuit org, Eye on the Arctic