Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Members Of Little People Community Applaud Change To Drop 'Midget' Term

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 19 Nov, 2019 07:48 PM

    TORONTO - The term 'midget' will be dropped along with other traditional age group names across Hockey Canada programs in a change that's being applauded by members of the little people community.

     

    "Hockey was our mountain and we've climbed it," Little People of Manitoba president Samantha Rayburn-Trubyk said Tuesday from Winnipeg.

     

    The governing body of hockey in Canada plans to replace categories like midget, novice, peewee, bantam and atom with age-based designators starting next season. The change was approved at Hockey Canada's winter congress over the weekend.

     

    "We want to be an inclusive brand, we want to be an inclusive sport, we want to be an inclusive organization," said Mark Halliday, Hockey Canada's vice-president of marketing and communications. "If there were groups that had some discomfort with a name, we wanted to look at that and make sure that we weren't putting up barriers to keep people away from the sport."

     

    The term 'midget' has long been used in a variety of sports even though it is considered by many to be a derogatory slur.

     

    "It's not about sensitivity," said Allan Redford, the president of the Little People of Canada. "It's about awareness, acceptance and dignity. It's often sometimes difficult to imagine the challenges that people with short stature face."

     

    The issue generated some buzz a year ago when Regina Scott of Guelph, Ont., who has a young son with dwarfism, helped make a change at her local youth basketball association after noticing the term on a banner at a mall.

     

    The Ontario Basketball Association later announced it also planned to drop the 'midget' term, a move supported by Canada Basketball, which already used age descriptors.

     

    Many provincial and national associations followed suit.

     

    Redford credits Scott for being a catalyst that helped push the story to the forefront. He added that a letter-writing campaign to various domestic sport federations also had an "overwhelmingly positive" response.

     

    "It means a lot to our group as we step forward to obtaining dignity and respect," said Redford, who also serves as a director with the Dwarf Athletic Association of Canada.

     

    The International Ice Hockey Federation and USA Hockey already use age designators. Hockey Canada initiated its change in conjunction with its provincial and territorial members and following the recommendations of a task team.

     

    The federation had classified the midget category as players who are under 18 as of Dec. 31 of the current season. Bantam is for athletes under 15, with peewee, atom and novice used as classifications for younger players. Some organizations use descriptors like minor midget and major midget as well.

     

    Moving to age-specific categories (U13 for under-13, U11 for under-11, etc.,) should also help make for a simpler classification system.

     

    "It's something new for (Canadian) hockey and we've got a long history of using other names," Halliday said from Calgary. "But we think it's going to be a much simpler process for people who may not be familiar with the long history of hockey."

     

    Redford said the term 'midget' originates from the oppression and exploitation of people with dwarfism in freak shows in the mid-1800s.

     

    "The bottom line is the m-word is attached to trauma," he said. "Every time that it's seen or heard, it is hurtful."

     

    The term is still used in some tournament titles. One of the more prominent events is the Dec. 26-Jan. 1 Mac's Midget AAA World Invitational Tournament in Calgary, an international competition first held in 1978 as the CP Challenge Cup.

     

    It wasn't clear if a name change might be forthcoming. A message left with tournament organizers wasn't immediately returned.

     

    MORE National ARTICLES

    33-Year-Old Pedestrian Dies After Being Hit By Car In East Vancouver

    33-Year-Old Pedestrian Dies After Being Hit By Car In East Vancouver
    Vancouver Police are investigating the city’s sixth pedestrian fatality of 2019, after a 33-year-old man was struck and killed by a vehicle during the evening rush hour yesterday.

    33-Year-Old Pedestrian Dies After Being Hit By Car In East Vancouver

    DARPAN AWARDS 2019 - Watch The Glittering Moments From Preston Cadillac Red Carpet

    The Preston Cadillac-sponsored Red Carpet Was Buzzing With Prominent Members Of The South Asian Community, Political Dignitaries And Socialites

    DARPAN AWARDS 2019 - Watch The Glittering Moments From Preston Cadillac Red Carpet

    Surrey To Join Conversation On Accessibility, Inclusion

    Surrey To Join Conversation On Accessibility, Inclusion
    People in Surrey are invited to participate in a community meeting to discuss the development of accessibility legislation for British Columbia.

    Surrey To Join Conversation On Accessibility, Inclusion

    Suspect Identified, Arrest Warrant Issued For Violent Robberies At Vancouver Skytrain Stations

    An appeal to the public, by Metro Vancouver Transit Police, has led to the identity and issuing of an arrest warrant of a suspect believed to be involved in two violent robberies.  

    Suspect Identified, Arrest Warrant Issued For Violent Robberies At Vancouver Skytrain Stations

    Surrey Family Pleads For Information 1 Year After Mother Struck And Killed In Wheelchair

    Surrey RCMP’s Criminal Collision Investigation is continuing to investigate a hit and run collision that claimed the life of Sharon Mitchell, and are joined by her bereaved family in a renewed public appeal for information.  

    Surrey Family Pleads For Information 1 Year After Mother Struck And Killed In Wheelchair

    Coquitlam RCMP Looking For Missing 25-Year-Old Man Michael Segers

    The Coquitlam RCMP is asking for your help in the search for Michael Segers.    

    Coquitlam RCMP Looking For Missing 25-Year-Old Man Michael Segers