Remembering a massacre, and demanding women’s equality (Gina Whitfield)
December 04, 2006 Seven Oaks
It has now been 17 years since the Montreal Massacre, December 6, 1989, when Marc Lepine entered an engineering class at L’Ecole Polytechnique, separated the women from the men, and then murdered 14 women with a semi-automatic rifle. Lepine, in addition to killing the young engineering students, had a “hit list” of an additional nineteen women he identified as feminists, including the first female firefighter in Quebec, the first female police captain, a president of a trade union, a sports radio host, the immigration minister at the time, as well as a transition house worker.
The massacre, rather than being just a random attack by a madman, was an expression of attitudes toward women that are still latent today and seek to hold women back. Lepine’s own mother spoke publicly this year about her son’s actions for the first time. She recalled the violence she experienced at the hands of her son’s father, and how Lepine blamed her for the violence that was inflicted upon her and for leaving her batterer.
Fortunately, my generation of young women has not lived through an attack as singularly traumatic as this one, but we know that rates of violence against women in this country have remained essentially the same. In the last few months, taking only the sensational cases (most violence against women is never reported), we have seen the murder of 5 girls at a one-room Amish schoolhouse in Pennsylvania, where a gunman again let the male students go. Closer to home, there have also been the recent high profile murders of Manjit Panghali and Navrett Kaur Waraich. The often misleading, and implicitly racist discourses heard in the media need to be questioned, as evidence shows that male violence is present across all ethnic groups. The Pickton case, indeed, should serve as a constant reminder of the seriousness of violence against women. There are, furthermore, still over 60 women missing from the downtown eastside and over 500 missing aboriginal women across Canada.
On the political level, especially with the current federal government, we can see the need not just to remember the dead, but to fight for equality for the living as well. Harper’s Conservative government is brazenly attacking Canadian women’s fight for equality. In fact, the mandate for Status of Women has been drastically changed, with the word “equality” being taken out and replaced with “participation”. Harper and his tightly controlled cabinet minister Bev Oda are brazenly maintaining that fighting for women’s equality is no longer necessary in this era.
Funding to Status of Women will also be cut by forty percent by April 2007, with the terms and conditions once used by equality seeking women’s groups changed to prevent funding going to groups for lobbying, advocacy and research. Of course, nationally, most feminist groups are working on issues of women’s poverty, violence, and health, and will no longer receive Status of Women money to fight for women’s equality. These new changes to the terms and conditions of funding will not only force the closure of feminist organizations across Canada, but will also allow private corporations to apply for funding, as long as they claim to be committed to women’s “participation” in society. Meanwhile, it is expected that the cuts and changes in language will likely mean a shut down of the British Columbia/Yukon office of Status of Women.
Although women make up slightly more than half of the voters in Canada, sadly women are far from equally represented in parliament. Not to mention that when women do gain access to these very male dominated spaces, they are openly called dogs in the House of Commons and bitches on talk radio, by the likes of Peter MacKay and Norman Spector – seemingly without repercussions. With the specter of male violence still hanging over us in Canada, women across the country are fighting back. On December 10th, International Human Rights Day, a new campaign will be launched to save Status of Women Canada. And on December 6th, the anniversary of the Montreal massacre, women’s groups across the country will be holding rallies to remember and to demand equality in our generation.
- The Vancouver December 6th memorial rally gets underway at 6:30p.m, outside the Vancouver Public Library Central Branch, 350 West Georgia.

Comment by neo, writing from Canada on December 5th, 2006 at 1:55 pm:
“The massacre, rather than being just a random attack by a madman, was an expression of attitudes toward women that are still latent today and seek to hold women back.”
It’s true, Gamil Gharbi (aka Marc Lepine) who was the son of an Algerian Muslim immigrant, was culturally predisposed to treat women like cattle.
Read Licia Corbella’s excellent article, “Not One of Us.”
Canadian media repeatedly refuse to publicise this politically incorrect tidbit. If the Liberal government had spent 2 billion dollars registering “spousal abusers” rather than farmer’s rifles… it might have made a difference.
Comment by Derek, writing from Canada on December 8th, 2006 at 11:35 am:
… and Canadian men are not raised to treat women like cattle? OK, maybe that’s extreme - but Canadian culture is no NO WAY free of misogyny.
Maybe you’d have some sort of despicable racist point if it weren’t for the fact that misogyny and gender violence/spousal abuse is prevalent across all ethnic boundaries. This is a gender issue - not a “race” issue.
Of course, being a racist person, you have to find any way you can to spin an issue into being about ethnicity.
Comment by Archie Emerston, writing from Canada on January 19th, 2007 at 1:57 pm:
When the 2010 Winter Olympics arrive Hopefully during that time there will be some type of memorial service to bring the aweful events to light so it doesn’t happen again And hopefully it will put pressure on the government etc. in the future as the international community is watching to stop the trajedy from happening again
Comment by Asad Gemini, writing from Pakistan on February 6th, 2007 at 9:07 pm:
Being a free lance journalist of international reputation i would like to participate in this sacred campaing so please do keep me informed about such incidents and its details.Please also inform me for any seminars conducted in this respect,may i could afford sometime to attend those and share my remarks and details with the authorities who make such noble efforts.thanks
asad from Pakistan