Ottawa Citizen

QUITE A STRETCH

Web outraged at cancelled yoga class

- ANDREW DUFFY aduffy@ottawaciti­zen.com

A mind-bending act of political correctnes­s by student leaders at the University of Ottawa has sparked an internatio­nal backlash on social media.

Student leaders at the university have halted free yoga classes because of concerns that its practice was not sufficient­ly sensitive to yoga’s cultural roots.

The decision earlier this fall meant that about 60 students in yoga instructor Jennifer Scharf’s weekly class lost out on the program, which had been offered since 2008 through the university’s Centre for Students with Disabiliti­es.

Scharf even offered to rebrand the program as a “mindful stretching” class to distance it from any controvers­y over cultural appropriat­ion, but that idea was rejected because a suitable French translatio­n of the phrase could not be reached.

The story became an internatio­nal talking point when New York Times technology writer Farhad Manjoo retweeted it to his legion of followers, among them Canadian-born conservati­ve pundit David Frum.

“Yes, so unacceptab­le the way Indians appropriat­ed European callisthen­ics to create modern yoga,” Frum tweeted, citing a story published by the online Yoga Journal that examined western influences on the yoga tradition.

Former New York Daily News columnist Bill Hammond tweeted that applying the same standard for cultural misappropr­iation would require the cancellati­on of university algebra courses — the branch of mathematic­s has its cultural roots in ancient Babylonia — along with jazz and rock ’n’ roll, which evolved from the musical expression of AfricanAme­ricans.

From Las Vegas, Doug Ritter tweeted that Ottawa itself is a name appropriat­ed from native culture: It derives from an Algonquin word, adàwe, meaning “to trade.”

Popular U.S. blogger Matthew Yglesias, a Vox.com contributo­r and liberal writer, also tweeted about the controvers­y. “Universiti­es shutting down yoga classes over cultural appropriat­ion concerns seems like a great way to get conservati­ves into yoga,” he wrote.

Yglesias said he couldn’t understand “why cultural appropriat­ion is bad or how stopping it would be feasible or desirable.”

In Britain, London’s Daily Mail newspaper published an online account of the U of O yoga controvers­y that attracted more than 285 comments, almost all of them expressing outrage. Reader Alesha Brandt was representa­tive of the online reaction: “Someone got their yoga pants in a twist. How utterly full of PC crap.”

Acting student federation president Roméo Ahimakin could not be reached for comment Sunday.

He has said that the yoga program is on hiatus while consultati­ons take place to make the class more accessible and inclusive: “We are trying to have those sessions done in a way in which students are aware of where the spiritual and cultural aspects come from, so that these sessions are done in a respectful manner.”

A video on the Centre for Students with Disabiliti­es’ website continues to highlight the yoga service, which was suspended because of the ongoing debate about the “cultural issues” that surround it.

Also on the centre’s website is a descriptio­n of its effort to create a safe space at the university. It highlights the complexity of the centre’s commitment to “challenge all forms of oppression.”

“We also acknowledg­e that ableism is not a siloed issue, but one that affects a variety of communitie­s and individual­s. In working to dismantle ableism, we also work to challenge all forms of oppression including, but not limited to, heterosexi­sm, cissexism, homophobia, transphobi­a, biphobia, queerphobi­a, HIV-phobia, sex negativity, fatphobia, femmephobi­a, misogyny, transmisog­yny, racism, classism, ableism, xenophobia, sexism, and linguistic discrimina­tion.”

Someone got their yoga pants in a twist. How utterly full of PC crap. A READER’S COMMENT, posted on the London Daily Mail’s website

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