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WhiskeyGrinder

(22,327 posts)
Wed Apr 4, 2018, 03:48 PM Apr 2018

Native American Lacrosse Teams Reported Racial Abuse. Then Their League Expelled Them.

https://deadspin.com/native-american-lacrosse-teams-reported-racial-abuse-t-1824292659

Lacrosse was played by Native American nations across North America long before it was colonized by Europeans. But despite Native people’s historical and cultural connection to the game, they were periodically banned from playing before the 1973 American Indian Religious Freedom Act restored Native peoples’ right to practice religious and cultural ceremonies. Native Americans who play and coach lacrosse today have recent ancestors who were forced to play in secret.

Jeremiah Moreno, who coaches the 7 Flames youth lacrosse team in the Dakota Premier Lacrosse League (DPLL), says he views instilling a reverence for lacrosse and its history as a part of his job. “The game is a ceremony to us. I tell the kids, this game our ancestors played was a ceremony, so you have to respect it,” he said. “The Creator is the one looking down on you watching you play, with a good happy heart. So no matter what happens, no matter who says what to you, you always remember that.”

Until a few weeks ago, Moreno’s team was one of a few majority-Native lacrosse teams playing in the DPLL, the only lacrosse league in the Dakotas, which includes players from age 11 through high school. 7 Flames draws most of its players from two Lakota reservations, while two other Native-majority teams in the league, Susbeca (which means dragonfly in the Dakota language) and Lightning Stick Society, field mostly players from Dakota reservations.

Last month, these three Native American teams were suddenly expelled from the DPLL by league administrator Corey Mitchell, for reasons players and coaches say they still do not understand. Members of all three teams say they have experienced severe racial abuse from other DPLL players, parents, and referees, and they allege they were kicked out of the league because Mitchell was uninterested in addressing their allegations of racial abuse.
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Native American Lacrosse Teams Reported Racial Abuse. Then Their League Expelled Them. (Original Post) WhiskeyGrinder Apr 2018 OP
This is beyond sickening malaise Apr 2018 #1
Kick. WhiskeyGrinder Apr 2018 #2
I live in La Crosse, a city named for the game, elocs Apr 2018 #3
I didn't realize that it was played across North America. I thought it was Canadian first nations StevieM Apr 2018 #4

elocs

(22,569 posts)
3. I live in La Crosse, a city named for the game,
Wed Apr 4, 2018, 06:03 PM
Apr 2018

and the irony is that no lacrosse is played here at all, neither at the high school level or at the colleges.

StevieM

(10,500 posts)
4. I didn't realize that it was played across North America. I thought it was Canadian first nations
Wed Apr 4, 2018, 06:05 PM
Apr 2018

that played Lacrosse. It was invented up there.

I guess the game migrated south. I hadn't known that.

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