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Paul Wellman

Carpinteria High School auditorium filled for the school board meeting


Warriors Speak Up

Hundreds Pack Meeting to Discuss Carp High Symbol


Thursday, May 15, 2008
By Adrian Castañeda
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The five-member school board of the Carpinteria Unified School District voted unanimously on May 13 to approve a motion to establish a board-appointed committee that would analyze and evaluate Carpinteria High’s use of Native American imagery and determine which emblems are offensive. Neither side of the dispute was awarded a clear victory at the board’s meeting, and many of the 900-plus attendees in the crowded gymnasium—the meeting was moved to accommodate the large number of attendees—expressed mixed feelings toward the ambiguous result.

The meeting marked the culmination of weeks of bitter words and outspoken opposition to the board’s 3-2 ruling on April 22 that all Native American imagery be removed from school property. Once again, throngs of Carpinteria Warriors, past and present, arrived to show their support for their beloved mascot.

On April 22 School Board Members (L to R) Amrita Salm, Leslie Deardorff and Beverly Grant voted to remove the Native-American Icons from the high school
Click to enlarge photo

Paul Wellman

On April 22 School Board Members (L to R) Amrita Salm, Leslie Deardorff and Beverly Grant voted to remove the Native-American Icons from the high school

After a suggestion from Superintendent Paul Cordeiro that a committee be formed in the fall to determine which emblems were derogatory, the board voted on the idea. The measure failed to pass because one member, Leslie Deardorff, abstained from voting, giving neither side the majority it needed to win.

Boardmember Amrita Salm said she felt that forming the committee in the fall was not timely enough and she altered the previous motion, stipulating that the committee would be board-appointed and would begin its work in the summer. This second measure passed unanimously after some modification as to exact dates.

Superintendent Paul Cordeiro
Click to enlarge photo

Paul Wellman

Superintendent Paul Cordeiro

What had been a peaceful forum for citizens to air their complaints to the board turned into a madhouse of shouting when the board members gave their reasoning for how they voted. The crowd grew rowdy when Beverly Grant began to defend her decision. Using a racial slur to make her point incensed the assembly and many stood up and turned their backs toward her while she spoke. Continuing to speak, Grant made allusions to the Holocaust and Nazism, further aggravating the assembly. Many of the parents and alumni present began to discuss efforts to have Grant recalled. “Never in my life have I heard the 'N word in Carpinteria,” one parent said. Deardorff, who voted to ban the images on April 22, said, “We are here to educate children without racial bias.”

Before voting, the board heard dozens of citizens, both for and against the ban, pleading their respective cases. The overwhelming majority of the crowd was in favor of keeping the Native American images. Many felt that regardless of the board’s decision the issue was that the public was not consulted. Former school board member, Mike Damron, accused the board of putting too much emphasis on the opinion of one student, saying, “I guess the other 700 kids don’t matter.”

To raucous applause Craig Price, a Santa Barbara lawyer who serves as legal advisor to the board, said he felt there was no legal basis for the board to make their decision unless there was substantial evidence that the imagery created a hostile environment or prevented students from utilizing district services.

The assembly was less jubilant when Elias Cordero, the 15-year-old sophomore whose complaints began the controversy, stepped to the podium and told the board he felt the school emblem was wrong. “I’ve lived with the pain and happiness of being Chumash,” Cordero said as some in the crowd booed.

The issue of Native American ancestry was hotly discussed by many of the attendees. Some argued that the emblem depicted a member of a plains tribe, not a Chumash Indian, and therefore was not offensive to the Chumash culture. Tom Macias, a Carpinteria High senior, said, “Chumash isn’t the only Native American in our country.”

Melinda Powell responded to arguments that the images were symbols of honor and courage not of mockery saying, “I’m surprised that people who aren’t Native American feel they can speak for Native Americans when Native Americans say it is offensive.”

This Mural outside the Carpinteria High School auditorium is one of the controversial icons on campus
Click to enlarge photo

Paul Wellman

This Mural outside the Carpinteria High School auditorium is one of the controversial icons on campus

Others sought to discredit Cordeiro and other Native American speakers by speculating about their Chumash or Native heritage. “Just because you stand up at this mike and say you’re Native American, doesn’t mean you are Native American,” said Damron, who is also an alumni and the booster club president.

To members in support of the board’s original decision, such as Monique Sonoquie, a Chumash and Apache lecturer in the UCSB Department of Indigenous Studies, the issue does not revolve around Chumash Indians in particular but respect for all Native Americans and their images. “We’re people, not mascots,” she told the crowd.

Related Links

  • Barney's Take
  • The Controversy
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Comments

Discussion Guidelines

“Never in my life have I heard the 'N word in Carpinteria,”

(N-word) Puhleeze!

“I’ve lived with the pain and happiness of being Chumash,”

(Angling for inclusion in Chumash Tribal handouts from the Casino...)

It's offensive "when Native Americans say it is offensive.”

So What?
Do you speak for all Native Americans? Y'all got together for a Pow Wow and decided?
When does your delicate sensitivities overrule my unalienable right to the pursuit of happiness? What's next? You want to rip the Geranamo tatoo off my butt?

I find Uncle Sam, Leprauchans, Colonel Sanders and Dick Cheney offensive. Should I sue the gub'mint to have pictures of them stricken? (What's Capello's number, he'll take 'em on)

“We’re people, not mascots,”

I agree.

sa1 (anonymous profile)
May 15, 2008 at 6:09 p.m. (Suggest removal)

The only hole in the argument I heard for removing the Indian Head as a mascot is that many people claimed to speak for the entire Native American community and that they were unified in opinion. They weren't and they're not. However, they are speaking for the majority of Native Americans and the majority of Native American institutions. They are also speaking from a position that is shared by most national academic institutions (including the NCAA).

Ask yourself: Why is it that the Indian head (complete with red-red skin and big nose) is okay to put on things, but if we placed a characterized black man in black face or squinty-eyed east Asian man we would be offended? It is a double standard in society with many causes. Partly because the Indian head is still common and the people it is supposed to represent are less than 1% of the population... a population incidentally that is disporportionately rife with poverty, low education levels, high suicide and poor health. All of these problems facing this community are a result of being systematically marginalized (first by war/murder and later by isolation) for hundreds of years.

This type of damage done to a people and a culture doesn't go away in a short period of time... nor does their resentment. So I can understand (even as a white American) how if I claim to use characatures of Native Americans (and their symbols or names) as a way of "honoring them" some of the members of that community... probably most of them... might get a little pissed off. Predictably a common response by a large number of the "Keep the Indian Head" faction is to counter that emotion by getting even more pissed off. Well touche... way to show how people can't get along.

The primary arguments for keeping the Indian head are the same arguments that were used to support segregation. The majority of kids (and their families) are opposed to the change and its part of the history and identity of the local community. The comaprison to segregation is not an unfair one incidentally considering that the Carpinteria school district was one ofthe last in the State to desegregate. The irony: they kept latinos out of white schools by saying "ethnic indians" (of both the US and Mexico) were too different from white kids so they needed seperate (but equal) "indian" schools.

cj138 (anonymous profile)
May 16, 2008 at 10:28 a.m. (Suggest removal)

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