30 years after Polytechnique massacre, new memorial park sign to recognize killings as 'antifeminist'

City of Montreal to replace older sign at Place du 6-Décembre-1989, which refers only to 'the tragic event'

Image | place 6 decembre

Caption: The new sign will be placed in Place du 6-décembre-1989, which features a monument honouring the 14 women killed during the Ecole Polytechnique massacre. (Radio Canada)

The City of Montreal will replace the sign at the memorial to the 14 women who died in the 1989 École Polytechnique massacre with a new sign that makes it clear the killings were an antifeminist attack.
The sign that now marks Place du 6-Décembre-1989, on the corner of Decelles Avenue and Queen Mary Road, does not explicitly mention that 14 women died on that date — nor that they were gunned down because they were women.

Image | Polytechnique New Sign

Caption: The new sign, pictured here, will go up at place du 6-Décembre-1989 in time for the 30th anniversary of the Polytechnique massacre. (Submitted by the City of Montreal)

It simply refers to "the tragic event" that took place at the engineering school on the nearby Université de Montréal campus and states that the site aims to "promote the values of respect and non-violence."
The sign will be changed before the 30th anniversary of the attack, on Dec. 6.
"We just felt it was important to name it what it was — and that is an antifeminist attack," said Sue Montgomery, the mayor of Notre-Dame-de-Grâce–Côte-des-​​​​​Neiges, the borough where the memorial park is located.
"Mark Lépine lined up the women and shot them because of their gender, and said he hated feminists."
This park is named in memory of the 14 women assassinated in an antifeminist attack at the École Polytechnique on December 6, 1989. It serves to recall the fundamental values of respect and equality, and condemns all forms of violence against women. - translation of new sign marking Place du 6-Décembre-1989
The new sign will state that 14 women were murdered in an antifeminist attack at École Polytechnique on December 6, 1989. It also condemns all forms of violence against women.
For some, this change is long overdue.

Image | Place du 6 Decembre 1989

Caption: This is the sign that now marks Place du 6-décembre-1989. It refers to 'the tragic events Polytechnique Montréal' but provides no further details of the attack in which 14 women died. (Radio Canada)

"We were going there every year in December, and we were pissed off," said Diane Lamoureux, a member of a women's studies coalition called the Regroupement québécois en études féministes.
"It took a long time for political authorities to recognize what happened on Dec. 6 in Montreal," said Lamoureux on CBC Montreal's Daybreak(external link).
"It's good that people can have a glimpse of what happened in Montreal just to make sure it won't happen again."

'A recognition of something true'

Nathalie Provost, who survived being shot four times by Lépine in the Polytechnique massacre, says the new sign is a recognition of the reality of what happened on December 6, 1989.
"I was not aware that it was not clearly written that it was an antifeminist crime," said Provost in an interview with CBC.

Image | Guns 20190715

Caption: Nathalie Provost, who survived the shooting at École Polytechnique on Dec. 6, 1989, says it is clear to her that the attack was antifeminist — and that this change is a recognition of that. (Graham Hughes/The Canadian Press)

"It's so vivid to me that it was an antifeminist crime, that for me it's just a recognition of something true."
For Provost, the new sign is also a way of honouring the memory of the 14 women who lost their lives in the shooting.
"It gives a better sense of what happened, so for the memory of my colleagues, I think it's important, too," said Provost.
"Keeping that memory alive is a way to [...] bear witness."