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    Human Rights Activist and Journalist, Ida B. Wells, Was Born on This Day

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    Washington Football Team Bans Native American Themed Attire

    By TheHub.news StaffFebruary 27, 20242 Mins Read
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    The movement to stop using Native American-themed attire and imagery in sports was a long time coming. This year it finally arrived across the sports landscape.

    From high school to professional sports teams, officials replaced offensive mascots with new team names and logos.

    State officials in Oregon, Washington State, Maine, and Colorado all signed legislation that essentially bans Native American monikers and images from being used by high schools.

    In baseball, the Cleveland Indians will become the Cleveland Guardians (at least for now as a roller derby team had that name first) in 2022.

    In the NFL, Washington stopped using the Redskins name last season and became the Washington Football Team (WFT).

    On Wednesday the WFT further separated themselves from their past by banning the use of Native American attire, imagery, headdresses, and face paint by fans at RFK Stadium.

    “We recognize that not everyone is in favor of this change,” said team president Jason Wright in July. “And even the Native American community offers a range of opinions about both our past and path forward. But in these moments, it is important to prioritize the views of those who have been hurt by our historical use of Native American language, iconography and imagery.”

    Continue reading over at First and Pen.

    NCAI and its Ending “Indian” Mascots team have launched a State Activity Tracker to monitor and share in real-time the growing movement at the state level to retire Native “themed” school mascots.

    View the State Activity Tracker: https://t.co/WGOnGI8PU5 pic.twitter.com/OAKc0VtgiY

    — National Congress of American Indians (@NCAI1944) August 5, 2021

    This content has been brought to you by First and Pen in partnership with TheHub.News. First and Pen “amplifies local sports stories from voices of color to the national conscience…”

    Follow @FirstandPen on Twitter.

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    • Human Rights Activist and Journalist, Ida B. Wells, Was Born on This Day
    • When ‘You Owe Me’ Becomes the Family Motto
    • Illinois Expands Home Birth Care as Black Maternal Deaths Remain Disproportionately High
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    Human Rights Activist and Journalist, Ida B. Wells, Was Born on This Day

    By TheHub.news Staff

    When ‘You Owe Me’ Becomes the Family Motto

    By Danielle Bennett

    Illinois Expands Home Birth Care as Black Maternal Deaths Remain Disproportionately High

    By Veronika Lleshi

    Beyond the Barricades: Black Businesses Demand an Economic Accounting at 38th & Chicago

    By Insight News

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    TheHub.news is a storytelling and news platform committed to telling our stories through our lens. With facts at the center, we document the lived reality of our experience globally—our progress, our challenges, and our impact—without distortion, dilution, or apology.

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    Human Rights Activist and Journalist, Ida B. Wells, Was Born on This Day

    By TheHub.news Staff

    When ‘You Owe Me’ Becomes the Family Motto

    By Danielle Bennett

    Illinois Expands Home Birth Care as Black Maternal Deaths Remain Disproportionately High

    By Veronika Lleshi

    Beyond the Barricades: Black Businesses Demand an Economic Accounting at 38th & Chicago

    By Insight News

    Subscribe to Updates

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