Windsor Star

Headdress ban gathering steam

- TRISTIN HOPPER

TORONTO — In a summer that has already seen the mass takedown of the Confederat­e battle flag, another North American symbol mired in controvers­y is now being removed en masse: the aboriginal battle headdress.

This week, the Edmonton Folk Festival joined three Quebec music festivals in banning First Nations headdresse­s worn as “a fashion accessory,” rather than for ceremonial purposes. “Such headdresse­s have a sacred, cultural meaning and we ask that you respect and honour that by not using them,” read a Facebook post by Edmonton organizers.

It added, “these items will be confiscate­d by festival security.”

Earlier, the Osheaga, Heavy Montreal and Île- Sonic festivals similarly announced “First Nations Headdresse­s are not permitted.”

Wednesday, the Calgary and Winnipeg Folk Festivals said while they would not ban the practice, they were officially asking patrons to stop.

“We do not have a policy banning any type of attire for people,” said Debbi Salmonsen, executive director of the Calgary festival.

She added she trusted the festival’s “inclusive, diverse and intelligen­t” crowd not to wear anything offensive.

Much like cut-off shorts and hippie headbands, native headdresse­s had until recently become a near-ubiquitous accessory at outdoor summer music festivals. Most notably, feathered headdresse­s are informally considered part of the official “uniform” of Coachella, a massive Southern California music festival.

Worn by native groups on the Canadian Prairies and the American Plains, headdresse­s — or “war bonnets”— have strict ceremonial meanings, similar to the Sikh turban or the peaked mitres worn by senior Roman Catholic clergy.

“These items cannot be legitimate­ly possessed or imitated by just anyone, as they represent achievemen­ts earned according to a specific criteria,” reads a widely circulated blog post by Chelsea Vowel, a writer from the Plains Cree community of Lac Ste. Anne.

Vowel compared wearing the headgear to flaunting unearned military medals or displaying a fake medical degree.

It’s this aspect of headdresse­s that makes them different from moccasins, mukluks or Cowichan sweaters, which typically are not seen as offensive when worn casually by non- aboriginal­s.

In recent years, efforts to banish wearing of the headdresse­s at music festivals has been spearheade­d by A Tribe Called Red, an Ottawa-based electronic group whose works blend in traditiona­l First Nations music.

In 2013, group member Ian Campeau, a member of the Nipissing First Nation, told CBC that at festivals they often faced crowds filled with white people dressed up in face paint and headdresse­s.

“Please stop wearing headdresse­s and war paint. It’s insulting,” the group wrote in a Twitter message at the time.

With music festivals across North America now under pressure to enact Edmonton-style headdress bans, the campaign is similar to last month’s drive against exhibition of the Confederat­e battle flag.

 ?? LEON NEAL/AFP/Getty Images files ?? Much like cut-off shorts and hippie headbands, native headdresse­s had until recently become a near-ubiquitous accessory at outdoor
summer music festivals. Several Canadian music festivals have recently banned the ceremonial headgear as a fashion...
LEON NEAL/AFP/Getty Images files Much like cut-off shorts and hippie headbands, native headdresse­s had until recently become a near-ubiquitous accessory at outdoor summer music festivals. Several Canadian music festivals have recently banned the ceremonial headgear as a fashion...

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