Green Bay Packers fans weren’t the only group outside Lambeau Field on Sunday morning. A sizable contingent turned out to protest the name and logo of the opposing team.
There have been calls for years for Washington’s NFL team to change its name and mascot. Its name is widely deemed offensive, while studies have shown that American Indian mascots can have harmful effects on Native American youth.
Sunday’s protest, led by members of the Wisconsin Indian Education Association’s Indian Mascot and Logo Task Force, aimed to draw attention to the fight.
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“There is real genuine harm that comes from professional sports mascots and trickles down to college sports mascots and high schools, where children learn early on that there is a difference between one set of people because of the color of their skin,” said Ken Munson, a member of Oneida Nation who protested before Sunday’s game. “We can help people learn that’s not the case.”
In recent months, school boards across Wisconsin have passed resolutions seeking to end the use of Native American mascots statewide. When the Indian Mascot and Logo Task Force launched in 1997, there were 65 Native American mascots at Wisconsin schools, said Barbara Munson, the group’s chair. Today, that number is down to 29.
The task force is made up of indigenous people and their allies from across the state, she said. Many turned out to Sunday’s protest including Clif Morton. He called Washington’s name and logo the “most egregious nationally” in terms of its stereotyping of American Indians.
“We thought it was very important to come here today and send a message to their team management, their players and to the fans who come here that it’s more than time for a change,” Morton said.
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Isabella Saiz, 14, brought some of her friends along to the demonstration. She said she received lots of smiles and “Go Pack Go” cheers from fans heading into the game, but she didn’t mince words when asked what she’d say to Washington’s team owner Dan Snyder if given the opportunity: “We are people. We will never be mascots.”
This was the third protest against Washington’s team at Lambeau Field. Over the years, Richie Plass has attended many of these protests at Lambeau and across the country. They can be disheartening, he said, when fans don’t take the message seriously. Plass, who served as a mascot when he was child, is now owner and curator of Bittersweet Winds, a traveling educational exhibit about Native American imagery. He said people have become more open-minded about changing American Indian mascots in recent years. But he still hears negative comments.
“People tell us just get out of the way and you’re wasting time,” he said. “I just thank them for their words and carry on because again we were here first, but we have no voice.”
On his way into the game, Kevin Feltz, of Junction City, stopped by the protest to take a few pictures for a relative in Auburndale who is spearheading a movement to adopt a new non-Native American mascot at a local high school.
“I believe it’s offensive and I totally agree with what’s going on today,” Feltz said.
Oneida Nation purchased a 30-second ad to be shown Sunday on Lambeau Field’s Jumbotron. Barbara Munson said the message portrayed in the video is the antithesis of what’s depicted in Washington’s name and logo.
“It’s accurate, authentic, real people and that’s the exact opposite of a race based stereotype,” she said.
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