Calgary Herald

SNYDER MUST SEIZE THIS CHANCE TO BE ON RIGHT SIDE OF HISTORY

Change the name of the Redskins because silence is complicity, writes Barry Svrluga.

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When we get through this moment — and make no mistake, we’re living through history on fronts both medical and societal — it’s pretty clear there won’t be a statue of Robert E. Lee in the centre of Richmond.

Fort Bragg won’t be named after another Confederat­e general, but perhaps an actual American hero instead. It’s 2020, and it would have been nice if righting past wrongs didn’t require nationwide unrest, but it would be a shame to miss the moment now that the unrest is here, to be heard and understood, forever and ever, amen.

Which brings us to the Washington Redskins.

Now is the time. Sorry, long past the time. Daniel Snyder, look around at this broken country. The best we can hope is that the death of George Floyd while in police custody leads us to someplace better, that we’re more able to understand the perspectiv­e of others, or at least listen to them, think about them, embrace them.

If the NFL season opens as planned with training camps this summer, Washington’s team should do so under another name. Under its new name. Whatever that might be. Put it on the ballot, and then mail it in!

There long has been an opportunit­y for Snyder, the team’s owner for the past two decades, to be on the right side of history as it pertains to the nickname, which is offensive on the face of it. To be fair, Snyder had polling of Native Americans — first by the Annenberg Public Policy Center in 2004, then by the Washington Post in 2016 — that showed, overwhelmi­ngly, they were not offended by the name.

But if it wasn’t obvious then, it sure is now. The same arguments for changing the name that have been applied over the years apply now: If even some Native Americans are offended, that’s too many. The prism through which we see them has changed, and that’s great. It’s not an honorific. It’s a stereotype at a time when we can’t afford them, because we need to see people not as groups defined by their difference­s but as individual­s defined by what we all share, which is a base level of humanity.

I have never before written that the team should change its name, even though I strongly believed it should. I’ll admit: The issue felt tired, particular­ly in the wake of polling that made it seem, at least for some, like a war not worth waging.

So my way of dealing with the name to this point: Cite it on the first reference in a story or column, then avoid it the rest of the way, referring instead to “Washington.” (A sports writer’s special stress: It can make for some grammatica­l gymnastics to get subject-verb agreement.)

It’s how I made peace with the reality that Snyder long ago had dug in his heels and had plenty of people with him, but marked a small, impercepti­ble protest of my own. I was wrong to handle it that way, and it took the events of the past two weeks for me to understand that. Silence is complicity. Change the name.

Think of it like the statue of

Lee in Richmond. Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam called for its removal on June 4, and though a judge since has granted a temporary injunction that has kept the monument in place, it’s clear where this is headed.

Lee fought for the South, which was fighting for slavery. How can a city feel welcoming for all races if that’s whom it actively chooses to honour?

“That statue has been there for a long time,” Northam said that day. “It was wrong then, and it’s wrong now. So we’re taking it down.”

Why? Let Richmond Mayor Levar Stoney, an African-american, explain.

“Removing these statues will allow the healing process to begin for so many Black Richmonder­s and Virginians,” Stoney said in a news release.

“Richmond is no longer the Capital of the Confederac­y — it is filled with diversity and love for all — and we need to demonstrat­e that.”

Apply that thinking not to a civic monument or, in Bragg’s case, to a military institutio­n.

The NFL took a major step this month when commission­er Roger Goodell — finally, mercifully — apologized for not listening to the league’s players when it came to matters of systemic racism and police brutality against African-americans. No, none of the 32 teams has signed Colin Kaepernick — yet — and the apology could have been replaced by an honest conversati­on four years ago. But why double down on a wrong rather than make it right, even if you’re late in doing so?

That’s how Snyder should be thinking. In any 21st-century environmen­t, furthering stereotype­s based on skin colour seems ludicrous. Somehow, it seems more ludicrous, given the understand­ing we’re trying to have right now, particular­ly of people who don’t look like us. This is a moment when Snyder, rather than seeming forced into a move he has long resisted, could show some level of introspect­ion and empathy.

The Washington Post

 ?? WILL NEWTON/GETTY IMAGES FILES ?? Over two decades, Washington Redskins owner Daniel Snyder has refused to change the NFL team’s name.
WILL NEWTON/GETTY IMAGES FILES Over two decades, Washington Redskins owner Daniel Snyder has refused to change the NFL team’s name.

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