|
Five weeks ago on Friday, August
5th of 2005, the NCAA Executive Committee issued
guidelines for use of Native American mascots at NCAA
championship events.
Some of you may have heard about
that already....
Hi. I'm Jim Berger, and I'm back in
town.
Yes, the University of Illinois is
one of among 18 schools that the NCAA singled out as
maintaining "hostile or abusive" mascots, nicknames, or
imagery. And that has been the talk of the town.
The controversy made national news
on The News Hour with Jim Lehrer two weeks ago on
Thursday, August 25, 2005 (see
http://www.pbs.org/newshour/bb/sports/july-dec05/mascots_8-25.html).
This commentary was recorded on Thursday, September 8,
2005. On the News Hour, Native American Charlene Keeters
fought back tears before the cameras as she recounted
the shock, anguish, distress and outrage she and her two
children experienced at the sight of a non-indigenous
dancer, decked out in 19th-century, Native-American
garb, performing at the half-time of a University of
Illinois athletic event.
Indeed, the Web site
www.retirethechief.org speaks at considerable length
about the intrinsic racism of this icon. That's right!
If you actually thought that Chief Illiniwek was a
wholesome symbol of a set of virtues to which we all
might aspire, the racist label applies to you too.
I could go on; however, "The Public
Square" affords us but three minutes together. What you
can do is look to the write-up of this commentary at the
community segment of the WILL Web site to glean all of
the Web links to my source material. That is at
www.will.uiuc.edu/community/publicsquare/.
And then Google the topic to find
your own leads.
Look for yourself and draw your own
conclusions. I refer you to the "Retire The Chief" site
(http://www.retirethechief.org/index.html)
where you will find U. of I. professor Tyeeme Clark
dismissing critics of the anti-chief movement as
"callous, cruel, unfeeling, and hard-headed."
I also refer you to PhD Jim Fay's
posting at Chief Illiniwek.org entitled "The Roots of
the Chief Illiniwek Tradition at the University of
Illinois" (see
http://www.chiefilliniwek.org/illinois/tradition-roots.htm).
The historical background of this tradition does run in
defiance of those "who were determined to impose
civilization on the Indians whether they wanted it or
not."
Seventy years ago a lot of Native
Americans did not want "civilization"-which really was
nothing more than arrogant, European culture-imposed on
them. Native Americans worked hand-in-hand with those at
The University of Illinois who honored traditional
Indian culture expressly so as to preserve that culture
at a time when it was under siege.
Indeed, to this day, Chief
Illiniwek remains a touchstone for thousands to those
who went before us.
Well, there is so much more to
explore, but my time is up.
Thank you for your consideration.
And whatever you decide, may your own conclusions be
informed and truly balanced. |