The Crusaders are right to rethink brand after Christchurch attack

By Geoff Troughton / Roar Guru

The Crusaders Super Rugby franchise, with input from New Zealand Rugby, is reconsidering its name in the light of the Christchurch terror attack.

This news should be welcomed alongside indications that the Crusaders will consult with the Muslim community. The mooted consultation followed fierce debate and criticism of the team’s current branding.

It seems scarcely conceivable the name and brand will survive careful scrutiny and reflection. Ideally, the consultation should extend to input from other religious communities, including Christians.

Disturbing connotations with branding

The Crusades were a series of military expeditions initiated by the Pope and western European Christian powers in 1095 with the aim of retaking control of the Holy Land and various territories held by Muslims that had previously been in Christian hands. These conflicts lasted until at least the end of the 13th century. Whatever nuanced studies of this period might reveal, the contemporary resonances of the Crusades remain steeped in images of violence and domination that are deeply disturbing and problematic.

Defenders of the name suggest the Crusader branding implies – or should imply – none of this, despite regular displays involving horses, knights and wielding of swords. In the wake of the Christchurch shootings, the club quickly declared its crusade was one of “peace, unity, inclusiveness and community spirit”.

Fortitude, determination and a daring spirit of adventure are touted among the aspirational Crusader rugby “virtues”. The club subsequently decided to distinguish its “crusade” from “the religious Crusades” by ceasing theatrical displays of sword-wielding horsemen replete with Christian religious insignia.

(Photo by Phil Walter/Getty Images)

Use within Christian culture

As the public comes to terms with this debate, it is worth remembering that Crusader imagery used to be very widely employed within New Zealand society. It was invoked for similar reasons, with no implication of brutality or particular connection to the Muslim world in mind. A key group that did so were the Christian churches, yet even they had mainly abandoned such usage well before the Crusaders franchise was even created.

In the late 19th century, churches joined with others in advocating various crusades for social purity. Social improvement campaigns deployed similar terminology for years. There was also widespread Christian support for the first world war as a kind of crusade against Prussian barbarism.

Ormond Burton, who became a Christian pacifist after the war, claimed in 1923 that his peers entered the Great War “in much the same spirit as that in which the finest chivalry of Europe followed Peter the Hermit to the Holy Land”.

Numerous war memorials, particularly stained glass windows, picked up on this imagery, depicting returned servicemen as modern crusaders. In a broadly Christian culture, this represented the sanctification of the fallen through heroic service and sacrifice. This iconography was not favoured after the second world war.

Crusade metaphor for evangelists

Evangelical forms of Christianity advanced crusading as a metaphor for the battle for souls. Among children and youth, the imagery had a distinctly heroic quality. The Crusader Movement was an interdenominational evangelical youth movement that operated in New Zealand from the 1930s. It took its name from a group that had used it in England since the turn of the century.

The instigator of the Crusader Movement here, Howard Guinness – himself a product of the British Crusader Bible Class movement – milked the military metaphor for all it was worth. Bible reading was “sword drill”, the call to evangelise was a “call to arms” and keen members were “good soldiers of Jesus Christ”.

Other groups used Crusade metaphors in support of evangelistic activity that aimed to make converts of nominal Christians and unbelievers alike. One early Pentecostal church took the name National Revival Crusade before becoming the Christian Revival Crusade in the 1960s. From 1949 to 1952, Methodists ran an outreach programme dubbed the Crusade for Christ and His Kingdom that aimed to increase the church’s membership by 5,000.

Perhaps most famously, the Billy Graham Crusades of 1959 and 1969, led by the famed US evangelist, had a major impact (particularly the 1959 outreach) on New Zealand churches and society.

Taking leave of the brand

By 1973, the Crusader Movement had become the Inter-School Christian Fellowship, and in the 1990s, the Christian Revival Crusade rebranded to CRC. Even Billy Graham – by then elderly, but the exemplary revival preacher – began referring to his outreaches as “missions” in the wake of 9/11.

These changes were not merely a question of changing fashion. They occurred in large part because Christian communities became increasingly uncomfortable with Crusader language and motifs.

The reasons were manifold, but three are particularly notable. First, the image’s violent implications were seen as increasingly incommensurable with Christian ethical norms of peace and justice. Second, there was increased understanding of the offence of the language to many Muslims and people of other faiths. Third, a greater sensitivity to the harm and risk posed to Christian minorities in parts of the world where the Crusades were regarded not as past history but a symbol of ongoing Western (and by implication Christian) aggression and hostility to Islam.

In this context, Crusader language and imagery became positively embarrassing, if not repugnant. It was recognised as a significant impediment to improving relations between Christians and Muslims in many parts of the world.

While many supporters will use the Crusaders name with little thought to its origins and implications, it remains an anachronism and source of discomfort to many New Zealanders – Muslim, Christian, secular and others. If the Crusaders franchise and New Zealand Rugby chose, as they might, to consult with the Christian community, they are unlikely to find great enthusiasm for retaining the current name. Indeed, New Zealand Christians will probably be grateful to see it go.

Geoff Troughton is a Senior Lecturer in Religious Studies at Victoria University of Wellington. This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

The Crowd Says:

2019-04-08T00:54:23+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


Saracens were named in direct response to another side called the Crusaders so...

2019-04-08T00:53:54+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


Even Buddhism is not without it's extremists unfortunately, though how they reconcile this with the religion itself is baffling. Much as the idea of Christian or Muslim extremists claiming they follow their indicated faith. Could it be that it's not the religion that's the problem so much as the nutbags who twist words and ideas to fit and justify what they want? As it is so shall it ever be

2019-04-08T00:49:16+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


Great comment BennO - agree 100%

2019-04-08T00:47:31+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


It can and does, yes. That's why I think they'll end up keeping the name but tone down / get rid of the knights in armour imagery

2019-04-08T00:45:33+00:00

piru

Roar Rookie


I'm unsure of what you are trying to achieve with this comment 'Class'Act. If it was an attempt to mock me in an effort to deflect and avoid having to come up with an answer I guess... well done?

2019-04-08T00:22:36+00:00

lassitude

Guest


I think you'll find the high-point estimate for Indigenous populations of the entire Americas may have been just above 100Million - varying down to estimates under 10Million. The estimates for North America are roughly a fifth of that.

2019-04-08T00:14:42+00:00

lassitude

Guest


I don't think it was stretching it to expect some sort of serious incident in NZ and Oz. I was sitting in my office in Christchurch the day it happened not far from a cordoned off area and the thing that surprised me was - I wasn't surprised. Not that I explicitly expected Christchurch or that it would be an ant-Islamisist but definitely unsurprised that a serious incident unfolded involving Mohammedans on one side of the equation.

2019-04-08T00:04:10+00:00

lassitude

Guest


Money-Bill wasn't exactly welcomed by the fans. A number, like me, saw it for what it was - merely to meet his self-interest and nothing of particular long term usefulness to the franchise. On top of that it retarded Crotty's development and the optimism (after Frueean's op) that the Crotty-Frueean combo would be the future of AB rugby much as it'd been in the underage teams. His Mohammedanism wasn't relevant.

2019-04-07T14:42:32+00:00

Istanbul Wingman

Roar Guru


That we can agree on. & the colonization of Australia and New Zealand was similarly devastating.

2019-04-07T07:55:19+00:00

elvis

Roar Rookie


So more American Indians were killed by settlers than the total death count of WW1 and WW2 put together, and no one noticed or if they did forgot to put it in the history books?

2019-04-07T07:11:21+00:00

John Short

Guest


I suppose next you will be advocating a change of name for the English side the Saracens who could be identified as having similar characteristics as ISIS. Grow up this so called political correctness is rubbish. The writer should spend more energy on criticism of the Sultan of Brunei’s recent decrees. All I can say is grow up.

2019-04-07T06:38:45+00:00

Muzzo

Roar Rookie


I'm referring to Christians over the centuries, as in well over 100 million North American Indians, were slaughtered upon settlement. And that's not the only instance. If you are talking about ISIS, well it was the Yanks & their allies, that created them. they were supplied with armament & equipment by the Yanks.

2019-04-07T06:28:13+00:00

Istanbul Wingman

Roar Guru


All the Muslim bombings? Interesting comment. Western wars and foreign interventions have led to approximately 8 million deaths since the 1990s. The vast majority of victims of terrorism are Muslims. & the majority of terrorist attacks in the US last year were committed by white supremacists, none by Muslims. Despite the rise of white extremism and proliferation of attacks, it is stretching it that this would lead us to predict the events of March 15 in the South Island community of Christchurch. Indeed, so far removed did New Zealand seem from the conflicts in other parts of the world that the rugby team's nickname did not cause offense, evidently. That has obviously changed now - which was my only point.

2019-04-07T01:47:27+00:00

Jim the Geo

Roar Rookie


A good read - thank you Geoff! Clearly the removal of swordsmen on horseback at the match was crucial, but after that I'm honestly not so sure.... The article mainly discusses the words 'crusade' a 'crusader' in their original religious sense, but of course these words have taken on broader meaning over the years. Indeed Geoff noted the club's attempt to 'rebrand' based on that broader definition. Is that not sufficient?

2019-04-07T01:06:05+00:00

Muzzo

Roar Rookie


Then again, Christians are no "Saints". Try looking back over history, where millions have passed, due to them.

2019-04-06T23:40:41+00:00

Purdo

Roar Rookie


The decision has to be made by the club, and I think the major influence should be from the immediate community, but others have opinions, and I think these should be able to be heard. What weight they are given is up to the decision makers.

2019-04-06T22:54:03+00:00

elvis

Roar Rookie


Nobody could have foreseen the events of March 15? Are you joking? After all the Muslim bombings around the world, it was only a matter of time before a crazy Christian did something violent as well. That's how the cycle of violence starts. Look at Northern Ireland, everyone had an excuse for their actions because the "other side did it first".

2019-04-06T22:37:38+00:00

elvis

Roar Rookie


I think you have totally missed his point...

2019-04-06T21:57:42+00:00

Duncan Smith

Roar Guru


If there's one thing that's clear, it is that we are now living in Monty Python world. The earnest tone of this article as it analyses 12th century religious symbolism for a rugby team is an indicator that we are all insane now. There's probably only one religion of peace, and that's Buddhism. It's certainly not either of the two who fought the Crusades. But what any of that has to do with rugby is a mystery.

2019-04-06T10:58:20+00:00

Ruckin Oaf

Guest


Hey Lano, Yeah for what's it's worth you have. What's your next leap of logic that McDonalds should change their name too ?

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