"If [displaced residents] object to it, I'll avoid it," he wrote. "But I think part of the problem is that we associate refugees with foreigners in hellish parts of the world. If there's one good thing to come out of this tragedy, it might be that we start to see that other refugees, whether in Africa, Asia or Latin America, aren't so different from us."
Even so, the concerns have prompted many news outlets to reevaluate their use of the word.
The Washington Post stopped using the term over the weekend, saying its use did not "fit the definition." The Boston Globe also banned it. The Los Angeles Times is taking steps to make sure it is used judiciously. The New York Times and Associated Press said they would use it on a case-by-case basis.
For some reporters, habits are hard to break. In a White House briefing, one reporter struggled to frame a question: "Who's running the entire refugee -- sorry, the displaced people, or whatever they are now -- there's no one person in charge of the entire operation now?"
One language observer, Paul J.J. Payack, has been following the issue for a week. A San Diego high-tech executive and president of yourDictionary.com, he also runs the Global Language Monitor (www.languagemonitor.com), which analyzes word usage trends.
Global Language Monitor found that the term "refugee" was usually associated with places like the Sudan and Afghanistan. It has appeared five times more frequently in the global media than the more neutral "evacuees." Payack said he was struck by the use of the word "refugees" to describe victims of Hurricane Katrina.
Using a proprietary algorithm that analyzes databases that include mainstream media, the Internet and the blogosphere, he determined that as of one week ago, "refugees" was being used five times as often as "evacuees." By Tuesday night, however, that had changed dramatically.
"It was down to 60-40 'refugee' versus 'evacuee,' " he said.
Payack does not make a judgment about which word is correct. "All we are doing is monitoring what people are saying," he said. "It was strange, though, watching Wolf Blitzer say 'evacuee' over and over. I think we could sit down and come up with a better word. Victims? Displaced persons?"
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What's in a name
Definition of "refugee" by the Oxford English Dictionary:
1. a. One who, owing to religious persecution or political troubles, seeks refuge in a foreign country; originally applied to the French Huguenots who came to England after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes in 1685.
b. A runaway; a fugitive from justice, etc. (rare)
c. transf. of migratory birds. (obsolete, rare)
d. Someone driven from his home by war or the fear of attack or persecution; a displaced person. (also figurative)
2. A name given, especially in New York state, to parties of marauders in the American Revolutionary War who claimed British protection.
3. a. Used appositively, as refugee family, scholar, tutor, etc.
b. Characteristic of a refugee. Also, of or pertaining to a refugee or refugees, as refugee camp, centre, colony, project, style, train.
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\o7Staff writers Tony Perry in Houston and Steven Barrie-Anthony in Los Angeles contributed to this report.
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