Chicago Sun-Times

MAINE W. DROPS PORTRAYAL OF AMERICAN INDIAN MASCOT

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Administra­tors at Maine West High School said last week that the Des Plaines school is ending its decades- old tradition of having a person dressed as an American Indian dance at school assemblies and athletic events.

The mascot had drawn the ire of some American Indians after photos and video of a student dressed in the buckskin costume and feathered headdress appeared on social media. After the controvers­y that followed, Principal Audrey Haugan announced the mascot would be retired.

In an email to parents, Haugan said the school will still be called the Warriors but will organize a committee to work out “the details of our representa­tion moving forward, noting the positive attributes of what a Maine West Warrior represents.”

Until now, the school had managed to evade the criticism that led other schools to eliminate American Indian- themed mascots.

But when Brett Chapman, an Oklahoma attorney and member of the Pawnee Nation, tweeted about the mascot, which he called racist, Cherokee Nation officials responded.

“The Cherokee Nation did not endorse Maine Township High School West’s warrior mascot 20 years ago, and certainly does not approve of its use today,” Cherokee Nation Secretary of State Chuck Hoskins Jr. said in a statement in March.

Chapman said in April this particular case drew his attention because school administra­tors “claim to have some moral authority from a … legally recognized tribe” in using the mascot.

In 1994, Mary Littlefiel­d, a poet laureate emeritus of the Cherokee Nation, dedicated a poem to the school. Years later, she said the mascot didn’t offend American Indians.

But many American Indian groups, including the National Congress of American Indians, say such mascots are harmful and derogatory.

The school’s logo still shows an American Indian’s face, but a spokesman for the district said administra­tors haven’t determined whether that image will change as well.

Keith Kehl, who portrayed the chief as a student from 1982 to 1985, said the decision was “wiping away history” and a quick reaction to recent social media outcry.

“It’s really dishearten­ing,” Kehl said. “It’s one individual who didn’t go to school there who chimed in saying it’s not the right thing, but had no premise to understand what it meant to the school and community.”

“None of us look at the chief of Maine West as a mascot,” Kehl said. “We look at him as a leader who embodies integrity and moral values and is seen as a leader of the school.” — Christophe­r Hacker,

Chacour Koop, Christophe­r Placek

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 ?? TWITTER ?? Maine West’s principal announced that the school will retire its American Indian mascot but still be called the Warriors.
TWITTER Maine West’s principal announced that the school will retire its American Indian mascot but still be called the Warriors.

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