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NFL’s Redskins Announce Intention to Change Name After Years of Pressure, Including From ADL

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July 13, 2020
WASHINGTON, DC – JULY 07: Washington Redskins merchandise is displayed for sale at a sporting goods store on July 7, 2020 in Washington, DC. After receiving recent pressure from sponsors and retailers, the NFL franchise is considering a name change to replace Redskins. The term “redskin” is a dictionary-defined racial slur for Native Americans. (Photo by Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

(JTA) — Yielding to mounting pressure from sponsors and advocacy groups, the NFL’s Washington Redskins announced Monday that they are changing their name.

The team’s Jewish owner, Daniel Snyder, had adamantly refused to consider a name change for years, despite criticism that the name was offensive to Native Americans. The Anti-Defamation League and the Reform movement had both repeatedly called on the team to make a change.

Facing a possible revolt from corporate sponsors, the team said early this month that it was undertaking a review of the name.

“Today, we are announcing that we will be retiring the Redskins name and logo upon completion of this review,” the team said Monday in a statement. “Dan Snyder and Coach [Ron] Rivera are working closely to develop a new name and design approach that will enhance the standing of our proud, tradition rich franchise and inspire our sponsors, fans and community for the next 100 years.”

Snyder’s Jewishness has regularly come up in debates over the name. In 2013, Dallas Cowboys owner Jerry Jones, in defending Snyder’s refusal to change the name, said it was “a real mistake to think that Dan, who is Jewish, has a lack of sensitivity regarding somebody’s feelings.” Days later, the satirical newspaper The Onion used an anti-Jewish slur in skewering Snyder.

The same year, the ADL’s former national director, Abraham Foxman, called for sports teams to move away from “the use of hurtful and offensive names, mascots and logos.” In 2015, the Reform movement’s Religious Action Center, in a letter to Snyder, said the name “blatantly mocks a culture that struggles to survive.”

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