Thursday, June 18, 2026
ADVT 
National

Winnipeg Mayor Brian Bowman Thinks CFL Edmonton Eskimos Should Change Their Team Name

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Nov, 2017 11:22 AM
    Winnipeg Mayor Brian Bowman thinks the CFL Edmonton Eskimos should change their team name.
     
    "I think there’s an opportunity to have a more inclusive name," he said. "That's ultimately a decision for the team, though."
     
    Bowman, who is Metis, said he respects the Edmonton CFL organization but would prefer a different name.
     
    The Eskimos said in a statement that it uses the name with "pride and respect."
     
    "At this point in time, we are actively engaged in listening to the conversation that people are having around our name. Those conversations are ongoing and we are keenly listening to all input including from our loyal season seat holders and fans."
     
    The team also said if Bowman has an opinion he'd like to share with it, he should do so.
     
    The Eskimos are facing the Blue Bombers in the CFL western semi-final on Saturday in Winnipeg.
     
    It's not the first time there have been calls for the Edmonton team to change its name.
     
    Andre Talbot, the retired 2004 Grey Cup champion who played for the Toronto Argonauts but spent his final season in 2010 with Edmonton, said that changing the team name would be a small, but positive gesture.
     
    "We have to honour the aboriginal communities of our great country and respect the fact that the name is deemed offensive and oppressive to these communities," Talbot said in an interview in 2015.
     
    "Sports organizations need to be community building organizations. And if we're isolating and offending part of that community, then our particular organization or league is not doing its job."
     
    Natan Obed, president of Inuit Tapiriit Kanatami, which represents Canada's 60,000 Inuit, said in 2015 that it wasn't right for any team to be named after an ethnic group.
     
    He called the term Eskimo a relic of a past in which Inuit people had no control over their lives or even what they were called. He said he would be offended if someone called him Eskimo.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Abbotsford Supremacist Group Distributes Racist Pamphlets For U.S. King Jr. Holiday

    Abbotsford Supremacist Group Distributes Racist Pamphlets For U.S. King Jr. Holiday
    Police say the documents containing literature from the KKK were inside plastic bags and were thrown out from a vehicle early Sunday onto the front yards of more than 70 homes.

    Abbotsford Supremacist Group Distributes Racist Pamphlets For U.S. King Jr. Holiday

    Murder Trial To Begin For Alberta Man Charged After Couple, Grandson Disappear

    CALGARY — A murder trial is to begin today for a man charged with first-degree murder in the disappearance of an Alberta couple and their grandson.

    Murder Trial To Begin For Alberta Man Charged After Couple, Grandson Disappear

    St. Catharines, Ont., Family Finds Advil Pills In Ice Cream

    St. Catharines, Ont., Family Finds Advil Pills In Ice Cream
    ST. CATHARINES, Ont. — Niagara regional police are advising residents to be alert after discovering Advil capsules in a container of ice cream.

    St. Catharines, Ont., Family Finds Advil Pills In Ice Cream

    Women's Sex-harassment Suit Against RCMP Certified As Class Action

    Women's Sex-harassment Suit Against RCMP Certified As Class Action
    In certifying the class action, Judge Ann Marie McDonald said she was satisfied the women have shown they have reasonable grounds to press their lawsuit.

    Women's Sex-harassment Suit Against RCMP Certified As Class Action

    Ontario Girl Subject Of Amber Alert Found Safe, In Good Health

    Ontario Girl Subject Of Amber Alert Found Safe, In Good Health
      Police had described one of the suspects as a South Asian male about 24 years old, 6-feet-2 inches tall with a thin build. He was wearing an orange coloured turban, grey sweater with cut off sleeves

    Ontario Girl Subject Of Amber Alert Found Safe, In Good Health

    Home Sales Rebounded In December Following Large Drop In November: CREA

    Home Sales Rebounded In December Following Large Drop In November: CREA
    TORONTO — Home sales are not going to be as big of a boost to the Canadian economy this year as they were in 2016, the Canadian Real Estate Association said Monday as it released its latest batch of figures.

    Home Sales Rebounded In December Following Large Drop In November: CREA