George Elliott Clarke withdraws from U of R lecture amid controversy

Canadian poet George Elliott Clarke says he will not cite the poetry of convicted killer Steven Kummerfield during a lecture at the University of Regina on Jan. 23.
Canadian poet George Elliott Clarke says he will not cite the poetry of convicted killer Steven Kummerfield during a lecture at the University of Regina on Jan. 23. Fred Lum / Globe and Mail




Clarke has been known to edit the work of Steven Kummerfield, who now goes by the name Stephen Brown. Kummerfield was found guilty in the beating death of Pamela George, of the Sakimay First Nations, in Regina in 1995. He was released on parole in 2000 after serving four-and-a-half years of a six-year sentence.


In Friday’s statement, Clarke said he “never intended to cause such anguish for the family of Pamela George and the Indigenous community.

“For that I am truly sorry,” his statement said.

“My purpose in my talk was to discuss the role of poets in dealing with social issues, but that interest has been lost in the current controversy. So regrettably, I have asked the University of Regina to cancel my appearance.”

In an earlier statement to Global News, Clarke said he only learned of Kummerfield’s crime four months earlier and that it has changed his view of Kummerfield.

The University of Regina had stood by Clarke as the 2019 Woodrow Lloyd lecturer, despite the pressure to cancel the event in light of Clarke’s affiliations.

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