Do Native American Nicknames & Mascots Add Insult To Injury?

By | on Feb 25, 2013 | 0 Comment
Native Amercan Nicknames And Mascots

Adding insult to injury seems to have become as American as apple pie and football when it comes to the usage of Native American nicknames and mascots. Photo Credit: topeventusa.com

By Janice S. Ellis, Ph.D.

How long will it take to admit and correct the insult and injury that is piled on by the continued use of Native American Nicknames and Mascots by high school, college, and professional sports?

Haven’t we as a nation done enough to Native Americans? First, we came to this country pilfered, pillaged their villages, women and children. We ultimately took the land and herded them off to reservations. They continue to be subjected to sub-standard education and poor healthcare.

As if this wanton and utterly disenfranchisement was not enough, we continue to reduce their culture for our entertainment by using Native American nicknames and mascots – from the genre of western film (The Lone Ranger and beyond) to our national pastime of sports, baseball and football most notably. Worse, we pass this on to our children.

Recently, the cry of “enough” grew louder. The Smithsonian Museum of Native American History held a day-long symposium about whether the pro football team, the Washington Redskins, should consider changing their name and mascots. The mayor of Washington, D.C., sensitive to the issue, has begun to use the “Washington Football Team” instead of the Washington Redskins.

During that day-long symposium, many attendants became sensitized to what Native Americans must feel when they see fans dressed as Indians and performing moves and dances that they haven’t a clue of their sacred meaning. There were many converts during that symposium, many vowing never to wear war paint, don an Indian feathered headdress, and mockingly perform an Indian dance, “the Tomahawk Chop,” again. Such use of Native American nicknames and mascots show racial and ethnic insensitivity and ignorance of history.

A few weeks ago, the Michigan Department of Civil Rights filed a complaint with the U.S. Department of Education, requesting that all Michigan high schools be barred from using Indian nicknames and imagery as their school mascots.

An editorial appearing in a Michigan paper, The Holland Sentinel, says it well: “…White Americans who blithely adopt for their own entertainment images from a minority group, especially one as persecuted through history as Native Americans, are likely to offend that group. The portrayals are almost inevitably one-dimensional caricatures, perpetuating old stereotypes. Too many people who would never dream of wearing blackface or a serape and sombrero abandon their good judgment when it comes to Native Americans, reducing an entire culture to war paint and feathered headdresses. If you wouldn't flaunt these images on a reservation, then they're not appropriate in a Michigan high school either.”

As a nation, a day-long symposium or a filed complaint, and other actions here and there are starts to take corrective actions. But, they clearly are not enough.

The pervasive, persistent, and insensitive use of Native American Nicknames and Mascots in our most endeared sports at every level only reinforces the need for a public dialogue in communities across America.

Not to have these honest dialogues is to continue to perpetuate our attitudes toward race and ethnicity in this country, which we all can acknowledge are still in need of major, major, major adjustments.

When going to a sporting event consider how using Native American Nicknames and Mascots adds insult to injury to those in  your community. 

What do you think?

 

This article originally appeared on RaceReport.com and is reprinted here with permission.

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