Lakota Lawsuit Over Hair Cutting Heads for Trial

Hair is a sacred symbol for Lakota tribal members and should only be cut by a Native American woman or a child’s grandfather in ceremony. (Adobe Stock via NNC)
A lawsuit accusing a Nebraska school district of violating a Lakota family’s First Amendment rights and unlawful racial discrimination is headed to court.
The suit was filed after a school employee cut two girls’ hair during school lice checks, even after the parents raised concerns.
Rose Godinez, interim legal director for the ACLU of Nebraska, the group representing the family associated with the Rosebud Sioux Tribe, said that hair is considered a sacred symbol that should only be cut by specific people under certain conditions.
“The family explicitly told the school district to stop cutting the students’ hair, because it violated their beliefs,” Godinez said. “And despite their pleas, the school district continued to cut the two girls’ hair multiple times.”
A federal judge recently rejected the Cody Kilgore Unified School District’s qualified immunity defense, which shields public officials from liability, clearing the way for the case to proceed to trial.
School officials have claimed educators were simply doing their job protecting public health. The school’s written head-lice policy includes no mention of cutting hair. Even though school employees were on clear notice their actions violated students’ religious beliefs, the policy was only applied to Native American students, Godinez said. She added the events also brought back historic trauma for the family, when Native American children were forced to assimilate in boarding schools.
“That has been very heavy for them, but they have remained strong in seeking justice not only for their two daughters but also for all Native American students in our schools right now,” Godinez said.
This article was produced by the Nebraska News Connection, part of the national Public News Service. Find more at publicnewsservice.org.
User login
Omaha Daily Record
The Daily Record
222 South 72nd Street, Suite 302
Omaha, Nebraska
68114
United States
Tele (402) 345-1303
Fax (402) 345-2351