Ottawa Citizen

LACROSSE’S NEW ERA

A golden age for Iroquois

- Doug George-Kanentiio, Akwesasne Mohawk, is the co-founder of the Native American Journalist­s Associatio­n and served as a Trustee for the National Museum of the American Indian. He was editor of the internatio­nal journal Akwesasne Notes and is the author

On Sept. 18, an event of great historical importance will take place on Aboriginal territory: the Onondaga Nation of the Haudenosau­nee (Six Nations Iroquois) Confederac­y will host the World Indoor Lacrosse Championsh­ips, the first global athletic event ever sponsored by a Native people.

Of the 700,000 or so lacrosse players in North America, an enormous and growing talent pool, the Iroquois have at the most a couple of thousand players performing at all levels of the game: peewees, bantams, midgets, juniors, seniors, on the college level and as profession­als.

At the world championsh­ips (www.wilc2015.com) the Iroquois, from this shallow pool of highly skilled athletes, will take on the best lacrosse players from 13 nations and are expected to compete for the gold. Onondaga is 8 km south of Syracuse, NY.

This is, as many hope, the next step toward restoring lacrosse to the Olympics and having the Iroquois participat­e as a distinct team.

Lacrosse is a game invented by the Iroquois many generation­s before contact with the Europeans as an alternativ­e to war and conflict among communitie­s and nations and as a contest which promotes peace and physical healing.

At one time it was played by hundreds of contestant­s on fields stretching for a couple of kilometres long, characteri­zed by matches which lasted for days. It requires stamina, accuracy, mental and physical toughness and exceptiona­l skills with the netted stick.

The Iroquois played the game throughout the summer. During the winter time, when the rivers and lakes were frozen, they unnetted their curved sticks and batted a ball across the ice, yelling “ha-gee!” whenever they were hit — the Mohawk word for “ouch” and a possible origin of the word “hockey.”

Once the Europeans had establishe­d large, stable towns they took to leisure activities and adopted lacrosse as a spectator sport. It became the official game for the new nation of Canada by the 1860s. It was adopted not only in the U.S. and Canada but was taken by the Mohawks across the ocean, where games were played before English royalty and clubs formed thereafter.

But the Iroquois were perhaps too dominant and by the 1880s were banned as teams from national and internatio­nal matches. There was one exception. At the 1904 Olympics in St. Louis, lacrosse was a medal sport and the Canadians sent two teams: one made up of Non-Natives and the second composed of all Mohawks. The Native team won the bronze, but the game itself was rejected as a medal sport with the exception of “exhibition” status in 1928, 1932 and 1948. At the Games in Los Angeles in 1932, the Iroquois played several teams, but that was the last time they were acknowledg­ed on the internatio­nal level until the formation of the Iroquois Nationals in 1983.

When box lacrosse was created in 1930 to fill otherwise empty hockey arenas, the Iroquois found that version much more to their liking and skills with its emphasis on speed, hard checking and stickhandl­ing.

The Iroquois formed local and travelling teams which crossed the country: stars such as Angus (Shine) George, Angus (Rock) Thomas, Robert Porter and Harry Smith (Jay Silverheel­s) filled stadiums from Vancouver to New York City.

With the arrival of the Second World War, box lacrosse faded for a while, but it began to reclaim its popularity in the 1960s led by the legendary Gaylord Powless and followed by the formation of the National Lacrosse League in the 1970s. A few years later the Nationals gave internatio­nal exposure to some of the best players in the world and led to a new National box lacrosse league with the All American Barry Powless leading the Rochester Knighthawk­s to prominence.

Other Iroquois were recruited to play at the college level with more All Americans: Neal Powless, Cody Jemison, Sid Smith, Gewas Schindler and the Tewaaraton winners Miles and Lyle Thompson.

The Golden Era has arrived. The Nationals proved their abilities when they won three consecutiv­e silver medals in the World Indoor Lacrosse Championsh­ips while the Iroquois Juniors won bronze for the field games in 2012, beating the Americans along the way.

In 2014 alone, the teams from Six Nations won three of Canada’s top lacrosse titles: Founders Cup, Mann Cup and the Minto Cup with the Onondaga Redhawks

Stars such as Angus (Shine) George, Angus (Rock) Thomas, Robert Porter and Harry Smith (Jay Silverheel­s) filled stadiums from Vancouver to New York City. — Doug George-Kanentiio The game is rooted deep in Iroquois history and is bearing remarkable fruit.

securing the President’s Cup as the top Senior B team.

The game is rooted deep in Iroquois history and is bearing remarkable fruit. For the first time in modern history an aboriginal nation is hosting a world championsh­ip and it is appropriat­e that lacrosse is the sport.

It is inevitable that lacrosse will one day takes its place as an Olympic Sport and entering that arena will be the Iroquois Nationals, the purple and white banner declaring not only their dominance of the game but their standing as free nations in the world.

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 ?? RICK MACWILLIAM, EDMONTON JOURNAL FILES ?? Onondaga Redhawks Neal Powless, left, and St. Catharines Saints Mitch Dumont are shown during action at the Presidents Cup, national Senior B lacrosse championsh­ips, at Grant Fuhr Arena in Edmonton.
RICK MACWILLIAM, EDMONTON JOURNAL FILES Onondaga Redhawks Neal Powless, left, and St. Catharines Saints Mitch Dumont are shown during action at the Presidents Cup, national Senior B lacrosse championsh­ips, at Grant Fuhr Arena in Edmonton.

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