Every
year, with the opening of the football season, I have the same complaint:
the name of the Washington, DC football team is obnoxious, racist
(against Native Americans) and must be changed. And, every year
I receive in response generally positive feedback from regular people
who hold the same concern. Yet the team's name does not change.
There
are many of us, DC-are residents and beyond, who have argued for
years that the name “Washington Redskins” is a racist name that
should be changed. Many college teams have removed offensive mascots,
teams have changed names for any number of reasons, yet the resistance
from the owners of the Washington football team is amazing.
The
problem, however, is not just with the owners. It is difficult to
exaggerate the level of football support that exists in the DC area.
From the moment that the pre-season training begins, football starts
to overshadow baseball in the media, whether radio, TV, or printed.
African Americans are major enthusiasts for the Washington football
team (unless they happen to be fans of the Dallas Cowboys - which
is another story). Yet our enthusiasm seems to blind us to the name
of the team and what it represents.
You
have heard all of these arguments before: what if the Washington
football team was called the Washington N---ers? I asked a Black
cheerleader for the Washington football team that very question
once, and amazingly she said that it would not make any difference
as long as the team was respected. Either the sister was out of
her mind; had no sense of history; or was in complete denial.
Yet
this year I feel even more strongly about this name issue. Particularly
in the years since 9/11, we have been witnessing the demonization
of various groups. Arabs, Central Asians, Muslims, or anyone thought
to be one of those groups is subject to attack, and I do not mean
just harsh language. Haitian and Latino immigrants, documented or
not, are also subject to demonization. In fact, in a recent immigration
raid in the South, Black workers supposedly cheered while watching
as their allegedly undocumented Latino immigrant co-workers were
being taken away. The bottom line is that the politics of intolerance
is strengthening, and part of the intolerance is not just one's
point of view, but whether one is considered “in” or one is considered
part of the “other.”
The
name Washington Redskins reinforces the idea that it is ok to use
racist, derogatory language in polite company. It is the equivalent
of commentators using terms such as “towel head” or “diaper head”
when speaking of Arabs. The moment that it is permitted, it turns
an individual into a “thing.” That person, in fact, is no longer
a person, but an object of scorn.
While
you may think that I am going overboard on this, my point is that
one cannot look at the name “Washington Redskins” in isolation.
Along
with names like “Atlanta Braves” and “Cleveland Indians,” the name
actually mocks an entire indigenous population that
was subject to one of the worst acts of genocide in human history.
Perhaps
it is time to change the name and regain our own humanity?
BlackCommentator.com Executive
Editor, Bill Fletcher, Jr., is the Executive Editor of BlackCommentator.com,
a Senior Scholar with the Institute
for Policy Studies, the immediate past president of TransAfrica Forum
and co-author of the book, Solidarity Divided: The Crisis in Organized Labor and
a New Path toward Social Justice
(University
of California Press), which examines the crisis of organized labor
in the USA. Click here
to contact Mr. Fletcher. |