The biggest lake in Minneapolis is experiencing an identity crisis.
More than a year after Minnesota recognized the original Dakota name of Lake Calhoun — Bde Maka Ska — a legal challenge has thrown its official name into question. With all eyes on the lake after a fire destroyed its historic pavilion in May, visitors and residents are left wondering: What do we call it?
The Court of Appeals says it's Lake Calhoun. The federal government is sticking with Bde Maka Ska. So are Mayor Jacob Frey and commissioners for the Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board, who have not minced words when it comes to their distaste for a city lake named after slavery advocate John C. Calhoun.
For Carly Bad Heart Bull, a descendant of a village leader on the lake and a leading advocate for the Dakota name, it will take time, but people will come to accept Bde Maka Ska — pronounced b-day ma-KAH skah.
"We're not trying to take anything away from anybody," she said of the name. "By spreading education about the history … we're actually helping [build a] richer understanding and a richer connection to that place."
Calhoun, who lived from 1782 to 1850, was an ardent supporter of slavery and expulsion of American Indian people from their lands. References to the lake under his name date back as far as the early 1820s.
After years of conversations with the public, the state Department of Natural Resources formally replaced the Calhoun name with Bde Maka Ska, meaning "White Earth Lake," in January 2018. A group called Save Lake Calhoun took the state to court.
In April, a Court of Appeals judge ruled that the former commissioner of the DNR lacked the authority to rename the lake, citing a law prohibiting the department from changing lake names after 40 years. DFL lawmakers tried to change the name this session, but the bill did not survive.