School mascots based on Native American stereotypes have been controversial for years, but a high school in Alabama upped the ante with a banner created for a football game. Many perceived the banner as making light of the intentional destruction of Native American culture.
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| This Native American from a famous PSA is crying because of pollution. Had he seen it, he may have shed a tear over the McAdory High School banner. |
Tod Humphries, the principal at McAdory High School in McCalla, AL, took full responsibility for the banner that was created for a playoff game between his school and rival Pinson Valley High School, nicknamed the Indians. The banner, which stood roughly 20 feet tall and 15 feet wide, displayed no images, but was emblazoned with the words, “"Hey Indians, get ready to leave in a Trail of Tears Round 2.”
The Trail of Tears is associated with the Indian Removal Act of 1830. Signed into law by President Andrew Jackson, the act was passed to force Native Americans off millions of acres of land so that mostly white settlers could move in. Native Americans were forced to walk over 230 miles to new reservations. This systematic removal from their homelands by the U.S. government led to the deaths of thousands due to exhaustion and exposure. Many refer to the Trail of Tears as the American Holocaust because of the similarities to the Nazi extermination of Jews in the 1930s and 1940s.
NBC News spoke with Adrienne Keene, author of a blog dedicated to combating the co-opting of Native American culture, who said the banner made her feel sick to her stomach.
NBC News reported that Humphries took responsibility for the banner and apologized, saying, “Please accept our sincere apologies to the Native American people and to anyone who was offended by the reference to an event that is a stain on our nation’s past forever.”
He went to explain that he personally did not approve the banner, but that it slipped through the cracks because the staff member who normally approves such things is “out on maternity leave.”
Keene said that the McAdory banner is a sign that American schools are doing a poor job of educating students about Native American history.
“This is representative of the miseducation in our school systems, especially with regard to Native peoples,” she told NBC News. “This points to a lot of underlying issues about how Native Americans are perceived in American society.”
Humphries said that he is using the incident as a teachable moment and that he is instructing his faculty to pay special attention to the Trail of Tears.
All social studies and history teachers will re-teach and/or review units concerning Native American displacement following the Indian Removal Act of 1830.
Read other articles in the Unbelievable School Decisions series:
Unbelievable School Decisions: Your Teacher Isn’t Really Dead
Unbelievable School Decisions: Child Stranded in Tree
Unbelievable School Decisions: Kids Made to Don Prison Jumpsuits
Unbelievable School Decisions: Baby Bunnies Buried Alive
Unbelievable School Decisions: "Pucker Up" Pep Rally
Unbelievable School Decisions: Cheating Teachers
Article by Jason Tomaszewski, EducationWorld Associate Editor
Education World®
Copyright © 2013 Education World
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