Activists hope amateur sports teams will follow suit in changing racist team names - Action News
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Indigenous

Activists hope amateur sports teams will follow suit in changing racist team names

Asthe Washington, D.C., NFL team prepares for a newname and logo, Indigenous activists on both sides of the border say that it's time forminor league sports teams across North America to follow suit.

Racist team names a barrier to participating in sports for Indigenous athletes, says Jesse Wente

Tara Houska has been organizing and advocating against Washington's NFL team name since 2013. (CBC)

Asthe Washington, D.C., NFL team prepares for a newname and logo, Indigenous activists on both sides of the border say that it's time forminor league sports teams across North America to follow suit.

"Team names and mascots have all been dropped at the lower and high school levels, and change is coming whether they like it or not," said Ojibway activist Tara Houska.

The Washington National Football Leaguefranchise announced Monday it is dropping its name andlogo, bowing to recent pressure from sponsors and decades of criticism that they are offensive to Indigenous people.

Houska, who was born in the border town of Rainy Lake, Ont., and was raised in the U.S.,gave credit toIndigenous advocates who have worked for decades, as well as the support of the Black Lives Matter movement, for making the name change possible.

In 2013, she travelled to Washington, D.C., for an internship at an Indigenous law firm. She was there during the NFL season and said she was taken aback by the culture of the fans in the city.

"I had no idea of how pervasive and how extreme the use of that slur and mascot was," said Houska.

She said she started engaging in campaigns bywriting letters, planning demonstrations and doing activism around changing the team's name, mascot and logo.

She said that Indigenous parents who have children in sportswillreach out to her for advice on how to begin the process of changing a team name.

"I regularly engage with Native parents all over Canada and the U.S., and they message me and say 'I'm trying to help my kid.They have a racist mascot.What do I do?'" said Houska, a member of Couchiching First Nation.

"I connect them with other Native parents who have gone through the same process. That is happening all across the country."

Barrier for Indigenous youth

Jesse Wente, Anishinaabe and a member of Serpent River First Nation, saidit is easy for sports teams to have team names that aren't offensive.

As someone born and raised in Toronto, he points to the city'sbaseball teamtheBlue Jays, its hockeyteamthe Maple Leafs and its basketball teamthe Raptors, as examples.

He saidamateur sports teams with racist names in Canada have the potential of excluding Indigenous athletes.

"In Canada we have professional sports teams with the names and logos, but the proliferation of it in the amateur ranks or in the minor leagues across Canada is enormous and I think that presents a real barrier to participation for a lot of Indigenous kids," said Wente.

Jesse Wente says racist team names can lead to Indigenous children being less likely to join sports teams. (David Donnelly/CBC)

He said there are many First Nations, Mtis and Inuit communities that start their own leagues because of racism in sport. He said amateur sports leagues should be doing everything possible to make sports participation barrier-free.

"Having those logos, not only do they dehumanize and distractbut if you're an Indigenous kid you probably don't want to play on a team called the Chiefs or whatever," said Wente.

Wente said in order to get amateurteams across Canada to changetheir names and logos,people may have to put pressure on the sponsors,like what happened in the NFL.

"It has become, at this moment, unprofitable for this particular slice of racism," said Wente.

Open to discussion

The Chicago Blackhawks logo is used by many amateur sports teams across North America. At least one team in Winnipeg that uses the logo says they would be open to discussing changing their name out of respect for the Indigenous community. (Tim Boyle/Getty Images)

At least one minor hockey team Winnipeg said it's is open to having the discussion about making changes.

The Manitoba Major Junior Hockey League's Charleswood Hawkshas been using the Hawks name and the same logo as the NHL's Chicago Blackhawks for 50 years.

"If our Indigenous community does have a problem with our logo, we would have no problem changing the logo," said Tim Scharer, the team's general manager.

He said the team hasn't had any conversations about changing the name, but they are open to sitting down and working with the Indigenous community out of respect.