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    Senator wants Washington Commanders to pay tribute to an old logo that offends many Indigenous

    By GRAHAM LEE BREWER Associated Press,

    1 day ago

    After a half-century of activism, many Native Americans thought a bitter debate over the capital's football mascot was over two years ago when the team became the Washington Commanders .

    The organization left behind the racist slur “redskins" as its name and retired the logo that was closely tied to that name: the profile of a Native man with long hair and two feathers.

    Now, a white Republican U.S. senator from Montana is reviving the debate by blocking a bill funding the revitalization of the decrepit RFK Stadium for the Commanders, who have been playing miles away in Maryland. Sen. Steve Daines says he will block the legislation until the NFL and the Commanders honor the former logo in some form.

    Daines declined requests to explain his stance or respond to criticism from Indigenous people who say such efforts are rooted in racism.

    The original logo was designed by a member of the Blackfeet Nation in the state of Montana. Some tribal members take pride in it and the legacy of the man who helped design it in the early ’70s — Walter “Blackie” Wetzel, a former Blackfeet Nation tribal chairman and former president of the National Congress of the American Indian, the country's oldest Native American and Alaska Native advocacy organization.

    Indigenous Affairs Native Mascot

    Native American leaders protest against the Redskins team name and logo Oct. 24, 2019, outside U.S. Bank Stadium before an NFL football game between the Minnesota Vikings and the Washington Redskins in Minneapolis. Many Many Native Americans thought a bitter fight over the football mascot was over when the team became the Washington Commanders. A white Republican senator from Montana just reignited the debate.

    Wetzel’s family says Daines and Wetzel's son Don , who died last year at 74, formed a friendship that may be fueling the senator’s fight for the logo.

    Indian Country is typically a bipartisan topic in Congress.

    Daines sits on the Senate Committee for Indian Affairs and has worked with Democratic colleagues on clean-water access for tribal communities. He has supported the passage of a truth-and-healing commission to investigate the history of Indian boarding schools , a bill carried by Sen. Elizabeth Warren , a Democrat from Massachusetts.

    Daines has also used the policy area to take jabs at the Biden administration and was one of the fiercest opponents to the nomination of Deb Haaland, the first Native American to run the Department of the Interior.

    Indigenous Affairs Native Mascot

    Sen. Steve Daines, R-Mont., speaks to reporters April 18, 2023, at the Capitol in Washington. Daines has suggested the Washington Commanders' former logo could be revitalized to sell merchandise, and a portion of the profits could go toward issues like the epidemic of missing and murdered Indigenous women.

    He accused her of being hostile to the energy and natural-resource extraction industries and said she would use the appointment to “negatively impact the Montana way of life.” In May, he blocked the nomination of the woman who wanted to be the first Native American federal district court judge in Montana. Daines said the Biden administration did not consult with his office about the nomination, a claim the White House disputes.

    Daines said in a prepared statement that he would hold up the stadium legislation until representatives of the Washington Commanders and the NFL show that they're working with the Wetzel family and leaders of the Blackfeet Nation to find a way to “honor the history of the logo and heritage of our tribal nations and to rededicate the organization as an advocate for Indian Country.”

    For many Indigenous peoples, the team's original name and logo represent an ugly history of racial discrimination and violence, as well as modern-day battles over ethical representation of Native Americans in popular culture. The National Congress of the American Indian, the organization that Walter Wetzel once led, has fought since 1968 to remove mascots like that one. Numerous psychological studies have shown the harmful impacts that Native American mascots have on children.

    Indigenous Affairs Native Mascot

    Members of the Blackfeet Nation perform Nov. 24, 2019, as part of the Washington football team's observance of Native American Heritage Month prior to an NFL football game in Landover, Md.

    Founded in Boston in 1932, the football team had a Native American man as its mascot, but after moving to Washington, D.C., in 1937, the logo was changed to a spear, later an “R” adorned with two feathers.

    Walter Wetzel had been working for the Department of Labor to address housing and employment disparities in Indian Country and worked closely with President John F. Kennedy, and was friends with him and Robert Kennedy. Wetzel worked with the football team to redesign its logo. He felt that, if the team was going to have a Native American-themed mascot, it should at least be a representative image, said his grandson Ryan Wetzel.

    Walter Wetzel suggested a profile of a former Blackfeet chief, John Two Guns White Calf. A likeness of that image would be used from the 1972 season until it was retired in 2020.

    “I understand the controversy of the name, I get it,” Ryan Wetzel said. “I come from a family that is divided with the name. But the logo, how can we still keep that and use that moving forward?”

    Indigenous Affairs Native Mascot

    Members of the Blackfeet Nation perform Nov. 24, 2019, as part of the Washington football team's observance of Native American Heritage Month prior to an NFL football game in Landover, Md.

    Indigenous Affairs Native Mascot

    Washington Commanders jerseys are displayed Feb. 2, 2022, at an event to unveil the NFL football team's new identity in Landover, Md.

    Ryan Wetzel said that in his final years his father Don had an amputated leg but still showed up regularly on Capitol Hill to find support for preserving the logo, and Daines took ahold of that cause. Daines reached out to Ryan Wetzel after his father died last year to see if he could help revive the effort to restore the logo in some way.

    But Native American advocates and researchers say use of the old logo is an inappropriate and harmful path to achieving justice and equity for Indigenous peoples.

    In Montana, some Blackfeet Nation council members wonder why so little of the millions of dollars the football team generated off the image of White Calf and designed by a former Blackfeet Nation chairman never made it back to the Blackfeet people.

    Decades ago, the football team donated a couple of vans to help transport Blackfeet elders to a nearby VA facility, said Blackfeet Nation Councilman Everett Armstrong, but he was unaware of any other resources or revenues that had been shared with the tribe.

    Indigenous Affairs Native Mascot

    The sun sets July 13, 2018, during the North American Indian Days celebration on the Blackfeet Indian Reservation in Browning, Mont.

    Meanwhile, one group feels left out of the discussion entirely: the descendants of White Calf.

    They were not consulted in the 1970s about the use of his image and have never been asked about it since, said Armstrong, a descendant of White Calf himself.

    A look at the largest Native American tribes in the US today

    Here's a brief look at the history of the country's most prominent Native American tribes.

    “They’d like a seat at the table,” he said.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=2wu39H_0uDNsEUL00

    The sun sets July 13, 2018, during the North American Indian Days celebration on the Blackfeet Indian Reservation in Browning, Mont.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1kCTvG_0uDNsEUL00

    Members of the Blackfeet Nation perform Nov. 24, 2019, as part of the Washington football team's observance of Native American Heritage Month prior to an NFL football game in Landover, Md.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1IPAqY_0uDNsEUL00

    Washington Commanders jerseys are displayed Feb. 2, 2022, at an event to unveil the NFL football team's new identity in Landover, Md.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1UlFaU_0uDNsEUL00

    Sen. Steve Daines, R-Mont., speaks to reporters April 18, 2023, at the Capitol in Washington. Daines has suggested the Washington Commanders' former logo could be revitalized to sell merchandise, and a portion of the profits could go toward issues like the epidemic of missing and murdered Indigenous women.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3yZmSY_0uDNsEUL00

    Members of the Blackfeet Nation perform Nov. 24, 2019, as part of the Washington football team's observance of Native American Heritage Month prior to an NFL football game in Landover, Md.

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=3xt2Of_0uDNsEUL00

    Native American leaders protest against the Redskins team name and logo Oct. 24, 2019, outside U.S. Bank Stadium before an NFL football game between the Minnesota Vikings and the Washington Redskins in Minneapolis. Many Many Native Americans thought a bitter fight over the football mascot was over when the team became the Washington Commanders. A white Republican senator from Montana just reignited the debate.

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