[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 165 (Tuesday, November 19, 2013)]
[House]
[Pages H7193-H7194]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
SUPPORTING ONEIDA INDIAN NATION'S ``CHANGE THE MASCOT'' CAMPAIGN
The SPEAKER pro tempore. The Chair recognizes the gentleman from New
York (Mr. Maffei) for 5 minutes.
Mr. MAFFEI. Mr. Speaker, I am proud to represent central New York,
home of the six nations of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy, which was
also known as the Iroquois Confederacy. It includes the Mohawks, the
Oneidas, the Onondagas, the Cayugas, the Senecas, and, later, the
Tuscaroras. It spread across New York, and was one of the earliest
civil governments in territory that now lies within the United States
and Canada.
Mr. Speaker, I rise today in support of Oneidas' leader Ray
Halbritter's efforts to change the name of the Washington, D.C.,
National Football League team. The name of the Washington football team
is derogatory to the Native Americans of this country. For many Native
Americans across the
[[Page H7194]]
land, the name of the Washington football team is a deeply personal
reminder of a legacy of racism and of generations of pain.
The current campaign to change the team's name is supported by many
groups and individuals, including Native American organizations, civic
and government leaders, editorial boards, and many leaders, including
my colleagues, Representatives Betty McCollum and Tom Cole, and many
others in a nonpartisan effort.
President Obama said recently:
If I were the owner of a team and I knew that there was a
name of my team--even if it had a storied history--that was
offending a sizable group of people, I'd think about changing
it.
I wholeheartedly join this effort.
I also believe that the owner of the Washington team and other NFL
owners should meet with the Oneidas as they have requested. How can we
achieve mutual understanding unless they are willing to meet?
Mr. Speaker, in my office and with me now, I keep a replica of a Two
Row Wampum belt, called the Guswhenta. It was lent to me by the
Onondagas, and it symbolizes one of the first treaties between the
Native Americans and the Europeans, concluded in 1613 between the Dutch
and the Haudenosaunee. The two rows of wampum, which are beads made out
of shells, represent Europeans and Native Americans. They are equal in
size and travel together along a strip of white, representing peace. It
was and still is a symbol of friendship and community.
Although the years since this treaty was concluded have seen much
devastation and tribulation for Native Americans, today, the
Haudenosaunee endure and maintain their culture. We have much to do to
improve our relationship between our two peoples after centuries of
strife, conflict, and repression, but so many are working to mend the
riffs and to restore the promise of brotherhood and respect that this
treaty belt contains. I joined a group of canoers last summer--Native
Americans, European Americans, Asian and African Americans--who rode
together across upstate New York and to New York City in order to
commemorate this 400-year-old agreement.
Wouldn't it be great if, in order to show reverence and respect for
the Haudenosaunee and the Native American tribes across this country,
we could continue to do these things. Wouldn't it be great if, on this
400th anniversary of this groundbreaking treaty, we could right the
wrong and change this NFL's team's name.
Mr. Speaker, this treaty was perhaps the first, but it wasn't the
last. In November of 1794, George Washington, whose portrait is one of
only two portraits in this hallowed Hall, through his official
representative, Tom Pickering, concluded the treaty of Canandaigua with
the Haudenosaunee. President Washington had a six-foot-long treaty belt
that was fashioned to ratify this treaty that our two peoples should
live in peace and friendship.
Mr. Speaker, George Washington, himself, respected the Native
Americans of this country and their culture. Shouldn't the NFL team
that bears his name do the same?
____________________