
Apology sought after U of T students cause uproar with blackface for Halloween (Globe & Mail):
Five students dressed as members of the Jamaican bobsled team received costume award
A University of Toronto student group is demanding public apologies from organizers of a Halloween party after participants wearing dark makeup were given a costume prize.
Five students, who were dressed as members of the Jamaican bobsled team and covered their faces with brown makeup, received the award from an elected student representative of one of the U of T’s colleges.
The costumes and award became intensely controversial after the Torontoist blog posted a story and photo of the men. Some argue the makeup deeply offended blacks and should never have been recognized with an award. Those on the other side say the costumes were innocent and that detractors are overreacting.
The debate was expected to bubble over last night at a town hall meeting organized by the U of T’s Black Students’ Association. The group says the costumes perpetuate blackface, the theatrical makeup associated with biased portrayals of blacks, and are as offensive as wearing Nazi regalia. A Facebook posting generated more than 300 comments, many of them heated.
“Using blackface as a costume, I think it’s wrong in any context,” said Dawn Samuel, president of the BSA. “It’s hard because some people unwittingly do things, but at the same time you need to recognize it for what it is.”
The BSA is demanding that student party organizers from three colleges – St. Michael’s College, University College and Victoria University – publish apologies in their colleges’ newspapers.
“The issue for most people was not the students that were in the costume, but the fact that they were praised,” said Daniella Kyei, vice-president of equity for the U of T students’ union.
Catherine Brown, president of Victoria University’s Student Administrative Council, said that while the three colleges organized the Oct. 29 Halloween party, only representatives from St. Michael’s College decided to award a costume prize.
“We regret that this insensitive costume was documented as one of the best costumes of the night,” she said.
Officials from St. Michael’s College Student Union did not return messages yesterday.
In a post on the Torontoist website last week, Deryn, the student who awarded the prize the day after the event, apologized and said he didn’t think the costumes would cause offence. But, after reading up about blackface, he wrote that he “felt embarrassed and upset over my own ignorance in how potentially offensive something of this nature could be.” The costume award consisted of free admission to the group’s next party, worth $5.
In a separate post, the students who dressed as the Jamaican Bobsled Team said they didn’t intend to offend anyone and were trying to portray the characters in the movie, Cool Runnings, a comedy based on the Jamaican national bobsled team’s debut at the 1988 Winter Olympics in Calgary.
The group consisted of four white students who wore brown makeup. One also sported a black wig. In addition, a Trinidadian student wore white makeup to portray the movie’s coach, played by John Candy.
“This movie played a large part in our childhoods, and we simply wanted to express our feelings towards it with realistic costumes, which in this case included skin color,” the post says.
They also wrote: “Would things be different if we dressed as Barack Obama, the leader of the free world? We believe so …”
(Several years ago, I came across a webpage listing all blackface party incidents in universities up to that year. It was a very long list. If you have the link, please drop it in the comments.)
Related posts:
- Canadians tolerate white racism against blacks, even in Toronto. by Restructure!
- Let’s Have a Racist Hallowe’en, Part II by Jenn at Reappropriate!
- Your annual Halloween post (October 30, 2009) by resistance at Resist racism – “Reminding you Just Don’t Do It. Because it’s not about interpretation or intention.”
- Canada’s integration problem is racism, not multiculturalism: study by Restructure!





November 14, 2009 at 10:19 am
Its absolutely amazing that so many who are seeking higher education seem to be so damn ignorant. I suppose they thought that since they weren’t going for the tar black version of blackface that they were somehow being less offensive. Absolutely ridiculous. I’m offended that this would even take place in my city, but really not all that surprised.
November 14, 2009 at 10:49 am
It’s my city too. Part of me doesn’t want to air the dirty laundry and give non-Canadians the impression that Torontonians are all that ignorant, but I’m doing it for Toronto, to bring attention to our own racial issues and local news.
The last sentence of the quoted article is hilarious, too. They just don’t get it.
November 14, 2009 at 10:53 am
awash in a sea of ignorance, so much of this seems like it should be common sense but I guess they missed the memo, at least the one guy gave a sincere apology
November 14, 2009 at 12:08 pm
Yeah, I definitely don’t understand how one could come to the conclusion that using blackface to depict the 1st American president of African decent would be less offensive. If anything it would be a billion times more offensive! Its sad that there were Black people involved, and from the looks of the picture condoning this senseless stupidity. I think Canadians are too quick to dismiss racism as an American phenomenon, when really that is the furthest from the truth.
November 14, 2009 at 1:01 pm
Deryn, the student who awarded the prize, apologized, and was sincerely embarrassed and upset over his ignorance, is South Asian. Just pointing it out, so that we don’t assume “Deryn” is the name of a white person.
November 15, 2009 at 10:41 am
I do not see what is racist about what these students were doing? Were they trying to insult black people? Were they portraying black people in a disparaging way? Were they in any way implying that black people are bad? I personally think not, I believe they were celebrating a pop culture phenomenon that everybody from Disney to the Olympic committee recognizes and enjoys. For me as a Jamaican this just another piece of our rich culture that manifests itself in a humorous way.
November 15, 2009 at 11:09 am
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Blackface
Also, isn’t the premise of the comedy Cool Runnings “LOL! Black people playing winter sports!!!”
November 15, 2009 at 2:39 pm
Here is Deryn’s apology: