Native Groups Want A Promise Not To Say That Racist Team Name At The Super Bowl

They're asking CBS to commit now, just in case.

A Native American umbrella group is calling on CBS to avoid using the Washington, D.C., professional football team's "disparaging" name, should that team play in the Super Bowl in February.

In a letter sent Tuesday, Change the Mascot urged the network to ensure that its Super Bowl broadcast does not become "a platform to promote bigotry."

"To that end, we are requesting that CBS right now commit to refrain from using the name of the Washington professional football franchise in its broadcast, because that name is a dictionary-defined racial slur," the letter reads.

The Washington team will compete in a wild-card playoff game this Sunday, making a Super Bowl appearance a possibility (if a weak one).

In 2013, the Oneida Indian Nation requested a meeting with all NFL owners during Super Bowl week, hoping to persuade them to push the Washington team to drop its infamous nickname.
In 2013, the Oneida Indian Nation requested a meeting with all NFL owners during Super Bowl week, hoping to persuade them to push the Washington team to drop its infamous nickname.
Louis Lanzano/AP

Joel Barkin, spokesman for the Oneida Indian Nation, noted that coverage of the Super Bowl reaches beyond the United States. (The Oneida Nation is one of the groups under the Change the Mascot umbrella.)

"At a time the American standing overseas is incredibly important to this country, it's simply unacceptable that we'd be promoting a slur in such a fashion," Barkin told HuffPost. "The dictionary defines it as a slur against indigenous people. There is no gray area there."

Use of the term "Redskins" and other slurs against Native people has been condemned by half of the U.S. Senate, President Barack Obama, religious groups and school districts, among others. In 2014, an ad agency created a powerful 30-second video underscoring how many Native people view the football team's name to be just as disparaging as other ethnic and religious terms now considered taboo.

The protesters achieved a legal victory that same year when the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office canceled six federal trademark registrations for "Washington Redskins" on the grounds that the name was disparaging to Native Americans. But last month, a key federal court in a separate case struck down the anti-disparagement clause in federal trademark law, finding that it violates the First Amendment.

Team owner Dan Snyder has thus far resisted calls to abandon the name, even offering his own definition to ESPN in 2014.

"A Redskin is a football player. A Redskin is our fans," Snyder said. "The Washington Redskins fan base represents honor, represents respect, represents pride. Hopefully winning."

Barkin said that despite Snyder's resistance, Change the Mascot will continue to pursue judicial and legislative remedies.

"The team's name changing is not a question of 'if' but 'when,'" Barkin said. "It's a matter of how long the NFL wants to be on the wrong side of history."

Also on HuffPost:

Brazil WCup Top Five Highlights

Amazing Sports Photos

Popular in the Community

Close

What's Hot