Dear Saddleback Community member,
We need your help. Add your name to the petition to completely retire the Gaucho as Saddleback’s Mascot
Why Now is the Time:
History is being shaped right now! In response to demands that companies, professional sports teams, and schools across the nation demonstrate a commitment to addressing racial inequality, these organizations have begun to investigate and retire structures and symbols that perpetuate exclusion, inequality, and racism. At Saddleback College, one of those symbols is the Gaucho mascot.
On the surface, the Gaucho might not seem to be as offensive as other, perhaps more explicitly racist, imagery, but it is in fact offensive for the reasons enumerated below. If Saddleback is truly committed to creating a campus culture focused on equity and inclusion, the college must take this one small but significant step to demonstrate that commitment and retire the Gaucho mascot now.
It is true that the overtly racist image of the Gaucho mascot was officially eliminated in 2015. However, this is still the first image that appears when one does an internet search on “Saddleback Gauchos.” In addition, the Gaucho is problematic as a mascot for reasons that go well beyond this single image. Although the college is in the process of trying to redesign the mascot, we believe we should stop that now. We believe that the mascot cannot be rehabilitated and must be entirely eliminated and replaced by a new mascot. As long as Saddleback College maintains this mascot, we are a part of the systemic racism that promotes inequality and maintains white privilege, even if we attempt to declare otherwise.
Retiring the Gaucho is not erasing history. It is working towards a more equitable present and future, one that we have already committed to give our students. Mascots should unite and inspire the college; instead this mascot has created conflict and disunity for at least the past twenty years. It is time to let it go.
What You Can Do
Attached is a petition being distributed among the Saddleback community—including alumni, faculty at other institutions, and friends and neighbors of the college—asking for the Gaucho to be retired as the Saddleback College mascot. We are asking for you to add your name. If you want to add your name to the petition, there is no need to physically sign. Just send an email to retirethegaucho@gmail.com asap saying you wish to add your name. In the email, include your affiliation with the college as appropriate (IVC faculty, Saddleback Alumni Year, Mission Viejo Resident, etc). If you would like to write a separate letter of stating why you think the gaucho mascot should be retired, please address it to Saddleback College and email it to retirethegaucho@gmail.com and we will include the letters in the packet along with the petition.
There will also be a forum for Community members to voice their thoughts on the mascot on Tuesday September 22, 2020 from 4:30-6:00 PM. If your schedule allows, please try to attend to express your support of the gaucho mascot’s retirement. We will present the community petition at that meeting. Please RSVP through Eventbrite, https://bit.ly/2QMrpq8 by Friday, September 18
Here is more information on why the gaucho should be retired:
Retire the Gaucho History Lesson [see below]Retire the Gaucho Official Website
Student Video Petition to Retire the Gaucho
Follow us on Instagram @retirethegaucho
And on Facebook at https://www.facebook.com/retirethegaucho/
Please email us at retirethegaucho@gmail.com with any questions.
Thank you,
The Committee to Retire the Gaucho
When one Googles "Saddleback College gaucho" (image), this is what comes up. |
I agree with the committee—I would do away with the Gaucho as mascot, even if the new "images" are true to the historical Gauchos. I can really do without this talk of “systematic racism that promotes inequality and maintains white privilege.”* I don’t think we need to go quite there to see the point of moving beyond the Gaucho:
First, as the committee states, when one searches “Saddleback Gaucho” and the like, that nasty old image always pops up (in part because our discussion of this issue here on DtB, going back 14 years, usually pops up).
Second, the original choice was made, not by students or the community, but by a group of trustees. Shouldn’t the choice be made by the community/students? (The 1968 board were neo-McCarthyites who named Saddleback College’s first building after a notorious racist/paranoid Congressman, “Utt the Nut.”)
Third—and this is the most important point, I think—if we’re going to embrace this historical icon, shouldn’t the community (including me) acquire a sound basic understanding of the Gaucho tradition before choosing the Gaucho as mascot? (BTW, only a very generous soul would likely approve of everything that he/she finds there. [Update:] I just viewed one of the committee's videos below, and — yep.) The community plainly hasn’t done that. Choosing the Gaucho as mascot when we don’t understand the Gaucho seems reckless and stupid to me.
My two cents.