Penticton Herald

Rift over pianist’s street-naming

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MONTREAL — Just weeks before the first anniversar­y of her death, Daisy Peterson Sweeney’s family is upset the City of Montreal has changed its mind about naming a street after the piano teacher who taught many jazz greats, including her brother Oscar and Oliver Jones.

Celine Peterson, Oscar Peterson’s daughter, says thenmayor Denis Coderre said at her aunt’s funeral a year ago the city would name a street after Peterson Sweeney.

The influentia­l pianist died last Aug. 11 at the age of 97.

In 2016, Coderre announced plans to rename 375 streets after women to help the city mark its 375th anniversar­y the following year. He said at the time the move would reflect the richness of Montreal’s cultural heritage.

The family had been hoping the administra­tion would rename a street in front of the downtown church where Peterson Sweeney taught piano and also contribute­d to the city’s black community.

But in May it was informed by the Valerie Plante administra­tion that a small park, or what Celine Peterson called a “dog run,” will now bear her name.

“That’s the best way to describe it. . . park is a very generous word,” Peterson said Monday in an interview from Toronto. “When we were given the details of the so-called park, we realized that it was nothing more than a little patch of grass behind somebody’s yard.”

Peterson said the family let the city know in a formal letter the park idea was unacceptab­le but that it only received a form letter in return.

In an email to The Canadian Press on Monday, the city said it wants to honour the memory of Peterson Sweeney and that its toponomy services proposed a downtown park which “seemed like an excellent idea, considerin­g its strategic location and planned redevelopm­ent in the coming weeks.”

But it added it’s ready to talk about finding another place which would be suitable for the family.

Peterson added the family is going public in hopes “it triggers some kind of proper and respectful reaction from the city as opposed to the disrespect­ful way this has been handled so far.”

Fo Niemi, executive director of the Centre for Research-Action on Race Relations, says his civil rights organizati­on became involved after the family came to him seeking advice.

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