Chicago Sun-Times

Native Americans should decide whether some high school mascots stay or go

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Anew bill making its way through Springfiel­d would make it tougher for high schools to keep their Native American mascots.

We support the bill in concept, even as its particular­s are being worked out.

Not all such mascots are necessaril­y objectiona­ble, though that’s a judgment better made by Native Americans, not this editorial page. But most of us can readily see why a war-dancing man in a full-feathered headdress and buckskins, or a team name like the “Redskins,” or a grinning “Chief Wahoo” is deeply insulting.

In the 21st century, schools should know better than to promote such stereotype­s, and many or most do. But old ideas can die hard and sometimes need a push. A studentled petition drive to scrap the Native American mascot of a Rockford-area high school prompted Rep. Maurice West, D-Rockford, to introduce a bill to provide that push.

House Bill 4783 initially required schools to gain the consent of Native American groups within 500 miles of the school in order to continue using a Native Americanth­emed mascot. West now wants to set up a commission of Native Americans that would decide whether a mascot is acceptable.

Schools that don’t comply with the rules could become ineligible for sports playoffs. Chicago’s Lane Tech, whose teams are the

Indians, would be among the 52 high schools in Illinois affected.

We don’t know what the final bill will look like — or exactly what it should look like. Indeed, Native Americans are not of one mind on the mascot issue.

Groups such as the American Indian Center of Chicago and the National Congress of American Indians oppose Indian mascots as harmful and derogatory. Other groups, seeing an opportunit­y to educate people and promote cultural pride, have worked with sports teams to make sure that Native American imagery and logos are respectful, not offensive.

All the more reason to support West’s idea of a commission that gives Native Americans the final say.

There are practical impediment­s. Cashstrapp­ed schools that scrap their names will have to spend money to change logos and buy new uniforms. And many alumni won’t be happy.

You should have seen the angry emails that Marlen Garcia, a member of the SunTimes Editorial Board, got after writing a column in 2018 about why her alma mater, Maine West High School, should scrap its dancing Indian mascot. (The school later did scrap the dance itself.)

But Native Americans should be the final judges. It’s their culture.

 ?? GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? The University of Illinois scrapped its Chief Illiniwek mascot in 2007.
GETTY IMAGES FILES The University of Illinois scrapped its Chief Illiniwek mascot in 2007.

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