Calgary Herald

Indigenous Games offer more than sport

Exchange helps overcome barriers between cultures

- JOHN CHIDLEY- HILL

The 2017 North American Indigenous Games are bringing a message of healing to Toronto, not just through participat­ion in sports, but through a cultural exchange.

Marcia Trudeau-Bomberry, the CEO of the games, emphasizes the cultural exchange is not just between Indigenous people and non-Indigenous people, but First Nations from across the continent. That process starts with Sunday’s opening ceremony at the Aviva Centre on York University’s campus.

“Reconcilia­tion is a two-way street,” Trudeau-Bomberry said Monday. “It’s about non-Indigenous people taking that step to learn about Indigenous people, about the culture, about learning about some of the athletes and where they’ve come from and what they’ve gone through to make it to Toronto.

“Everyone’s got a different story to tell, different challenges and different barriers.”

Running July 16-23 in Toronto, Hamilton and nearby Six Nations, Ont., the North American Indigenous Games — NAIG for short — are for athletes 19 or younger competing in 14 sports including track and field, basketball, baseball, boxing, golf, lacrosse, swimming and soccer, among others. Canadian teams are broken up by province or territory, while U.S. athletes are broken up into 13 regions.

Although the inaugural NAIG was held in Edmonton in 1990, this summer’s edition has taken on new importance after the Truth and Reconcilia­tion Commission of Canada’s Call to Action No. 88 requested that all levels of government support the Games to help heal the legacy of residentia­l schools and ongoing systemic racism in First Nations communitie­s.

On the surface, NAIG encourages the physical health of its competitor­s, but Trudeau-Bomberry sees the event as a multi-layered approach to healing Aboriginal communitie­s.

Part of that is helping non-Indigenous people experience Aboriginal culture and sports. To that end, all competitio­n and cultural events except the opening and closing ceremonies have free admission.

But NAIG is also an opportunit­y for Indigenous youth to meet each other, share their common experience­s and appreciate that they’re not alone.

“You introduce a kid to a sport and they thrive and they have this community and this feeling of inclusion that will stay with them for a lifetime,” said former Olympic boxer Mary Spencer, who competed in basketball at NAIG in 2002. “These Games give these kids who are left out of so many different areas that opportunit­y to feel that sense of belonging in the realm of sport.

“It’s an absolutely incredible event that’s happening in Toronto and all of us in Ontario, Indigenous or not, can be proud that we’re hosting it.”

Trudeau-Bomberry points out the province contains sizable Metis and Inuit population­s in addition to First Nations.

“As we deliver the Games we want to give a good representa­tion of Indigenous cultures across Ontario. We also understand that in contempora­ry Canadian culture, that urban centres have become home to a large number of Indigenous cultures that are from all over (North America).”

 ??  ?? Mary Spencer
Mary Spencer

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