============================================================ Get 11 Free CDs, with nothing more to buy, ever! Simply join BMG Music Service and you can choose your FREE CDs with membership. It's 100% RISK FREE! http://click.topica.com/caaac8rb1ddNBb2HgmNa/BMG ============================================================ Myron Beckenstein / Baltimore Sun BALTIMORE -- One thing is wrong with the attempt by some Indian groups to have Indian names removed from sports teams: It is the wrong battle. A resolution approved this month by Maryland's Commission on Indian Affairs, said such usage "makes a mockery of indigenous cultural identity, promotes racial stereotypes and destroys the self-esteem of American Indian young people." The movement is not just in Maryland and has been building steam for years. The problem is that the names are not meant to mock Indians, but to honor them. Sports teams want identities that bolster the players, not demean them, ones that make them feel good about themselves and project a favorable image to the fans. That's why we have the Mavericks but not the Donkeys, the Bears but not the Hyenas, the Giants but not the Pygmies. What is mocking about Braves, Indians, Chiefs, Mohawks, etc.? Even Redskins, while slang, is not a derogatory term and is not meant to make the football players run for the nearest locker room every time the name is mentioned. Are they negative stereotypes or even stereotypes period? In our complex world, almost everything is reduced to stereotypes, but these terms are too generic to even qualify as that, and they lack a defining adjective to give them malevolence, such as sullen Sioux, carefree Irish or wily Pathan. "Indian" is no more automatically a stereotype than car, Viking, tree or even football. If they somehow still are classed as stereotypes for the image the nouns alone convey, at least they are, in context, positive stereotypes, and who can ask for more than that? The non-Indian view of Indians has changed time and again since the first white settlements in the early 17th century. The Indians were admired, demonized, feared, belittled, sympathized with, admired again and through most of the time fought and/or malignantly neglected. The Indians have good cause to lament the way they were treated. History and geography were not kind to them. Even if the first settlers had not stayed, the Indians would not have been left alone. Imperialism abhors a vacuum, and to the age of exploration a lack of Europeans and Christianity was a vacuum. What happened in America also happened in Africa and to a lesser extent in parts of Asia as Europeans spread their gospel, trading routes and economic lusts. If it hadn't been the French, British and Spanish, it could have been the Dutch, Portuguese and Swedes. That the conquering power could have handled the situation better is beyond dispute. Treaties and promises generally had more substance than was applied to those with Indians. Too often, might meant more than right or justice or even compassion. But even in the late 19th century, after most Indians had been condensed into a small part of the country and when small numbers of Indian fighters were running the U.S. Army ragged, there was at least a grudging respect for them in all but a few hearts. It is this respect, no longer grudging, that is now offered in choosing Indian names and symbols as ones that bestow virtue and power on the recipients. Our Indian heritage is a major part of this country. If sports names are changed, what would be the next target, geographic names? Goodbye, Indian Head and Squaw Valley, etc. And names that are based on the Indian names are a major part of the landscape, from state names on down. It is knowing how to pronounce the names of area rivers and towns that distinguishes the local from the outsider. To do their cause more good, the forces that now are flexing their muscles against the names should redirect their efforts to doing something about a truly dishonorable situation, the conditions that prevail for those forced to live on reservations. More than a century after the fighting stopped, malignant neglect is still the rule of the day, and administration after administration has done little to improve things. Social, health and education problems abound. Only historians can change the past. But we can work in the present to change the future. -- Andr� Cramblit, Operations Director-Northern California Indian Development Council NCIDC (http://www.ncidc.org) is a non-profit that meets the development needs of American Indians and operates an art gallery featuring the art of California tribes (http://www.americanindianonline.com) ============================================================ Coffee, pastry, orange juice, and developerWorks. Fuel for a developer's day. Get the developerWorks newsletter. http://click.topica.com/caaacCLb1ddNBb2HgmNf/developerWorks ============================================================ Visit and show your support for the Grass Roots Oyate http://members.tripod.com/GrassRootsOyate Clemency for Leonard Peltier. 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