National Post (National Edition)

‘Medicine game’ used to rally pipeline protest

Lacrosse becomes tool to ease tensions

- JOHN CHIDLEY-HILL The Canadian Press

Last week, Lyle Thompson packed up his family, a couple of friends and dozens of lacrosse sticks and drove more than 24 hours from his home in upstate New York to the site of the Dakota Access pipeline protests.

The lacrosse star wanted to see the demonstrat­ions for himself, and he hoped he could lift spirits at the protesters’ campsite through his sport, known by the Iroquois as the “medicine game.”

He also brought his wife Amanda, their three daughters, fellow pro player Bill O’Brien and University of Albany head coach Scott Marr to the Standing Rock Indian Reservatio­n near the border between North and South Dakota. The plan was to organize a lacrosse game.

“All I’m trying to do is spread awareness and help other people, help other people in this world,” Thompson said Tuesday from Syracuse, N.Y., near Onondaga Nation, where he grew up. “For this case, it’s the people in North Dakota. It’s been people fighting for other people, the people of this world, everything living.

“I know what I stand up for, I know what I represent, I know what I care about.”

The protests over the constructi­on of Energy Transfer Partners’ Dakota Access pipeline began in the spring. The proposed pipeline would run from the oilfields in western North Dakota to Southern Illinois, crossing beneath the Missouri and Mississipp­i rivers, as well as part of Lake Oahe near the Standing Rock Indian Reservatio­n.

Protesters want to stop the completion of the 1,886-kilometre pipeline because of the potential effects on drinking water on the reserve and further downstream on the Missouri River, as well as the possible destructio­n of cultural artifacts, including burial sites. The Standing Rock Sioux also claim that the land near the confluence of the Missouri and Cannonball rivers is owned by them under a nearly 150-year-old treaty.

Thompson, 24, arrived Nov. 22, less than a day after violence erupted between protesters and security officers. Protesters say police officers used fire hoses, tear gas and rubber bullets, while authoritie­s say they were assaulted with rocks and burning logs. Tensions were still running high after Morton County Sheriff Kyle Kirchmeier said authoritie­s would use the fire hoses again if necessary. Human rights organizati­on Amnesty Internatio­n- al had denounced officers’ use of water when temperatur­es were below freezing.

After addressing the protesters at the community bonfire, Thompson walked around the campsite to personally spread word of a lacrosse game he was organizing. Despite the violence less than 24 hours earlier, he was struck by the generosity of the demonstrat­ors.

“I went around walking among the tents and telling them that I was going to have a lacrosse game around three o’clock and every tent that I stopped at, a woman would come out and offer me food and a coffee,” said Thompson, who described the experience as eye-opening. “To me that was something really cool, it was something where everyone was looking out for each other and on the same team.”

The Iroquois, who refer to themselves as the Haudenosau­nee, created the sport of lacrosse, believing it has both physical and spiritual healing properties.

Thompson, who plays profession­ally for the National Lacrosse League’s Georgia Swarm and Major League Lacrosse’s Florida Launch, hoped to tap into that tradition at the protest site. More than 16 people, including Caucasian, African-American and First Nations players, joined Thompson, O’Brien and Marr on a field that had wooden posts as goals.

“It was really kind of a spiritual experience, to be a part of the traditiona­l sense of the game, playing for a cause, playing for a purpose, rather than playing for a win or a loss in a collegiate game,” Marr said. “It was really deep to be part of something like that. You were trying to play for the healing of the people that were there and what’s going on at that reservatio­n.”

Thompson said he wanted to go beyond the negative headlines and bring attention to the peaceful, community-oriented side of the demonstrat­ions.

“I’m going to help, do what I can, and the reason for that is because, it’s not every day that someone’s in my position,” said Thompson, who spent a little over two days at the campsite. “I’m a Native American who has an opportunit­y to leverage themselves and help a bigger cause. I feel like I’m in a position to help people and I’m going to do that. I’m not just going to let it slide by.”

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