Iroquois Nationals
Lacrosse
Haudenosaunee/Iroquois Confederacy: the Mohawk, Oneida, Onondaga, Cayuga,
Seneca, and Tuscarora Nations
Contact:
Barbara Barnes, Executive Director
Iroquois Nationals Lacrosse Board of Directors
PO Box 233– Onondaga Nation
Nedrow, New York 13120
Tel: (613) 933-9534 Fax: (613) 932-0092
E-mail: Barbara@iroquoisnationals.com
Website: www.iroquoisnationals.com
Officially sanctioned
by the Grand Council of Chiefs to represent
the Haudenosaunee (Iroquois), the Iroquois
Nationals Lacrosse Team is the only Native
national sports team in international
competition. The Team, which has won
numerous medals and awards, travels overseas
using Haudenosauneee passports, and in
so doing, has successfully engaged state
departments, embassies, and consulates
around the world in recognizing the sovereignty
of the Iroquois Confederacy and its member
nations. Team members comprise a corps
of Iroquois ambassadors who build international
goodwill and educate fellow athletes,
government officials, and the public
about the Iroquois.
The Haudenosaunee—also known as
the Iroquois or “People of the Longhouse”—have
always taken a firm stance on their sovereignty.
The Iroquois Confederacy, which serves
as the traditional supra-national governing
body of the Haudenosaunee, is comprised
of six nations—the Mohawk, Oneida,
Onondaga, Cayuga, Seneca, and Tuscarora
Nations—whose ancestral homelands
extend from eastern Canada to the American
southeast. Within this confederacy, the
Onondaga Nation, the Seneca Nation at Tonawanda,
and the Tuscarora Nation in New York maintain
traditional chieftain forms of government,
codified over one thousand years ago in
the Guyanashawnagonah, or the “Great
Law of Peace.” In defense of their
sovereignty, these traditional governments
have long resisted interference and support
from the federal government. They have
instead chosen to maintain their ancient
governments, providing services for their
own citizenry rather than depending on
federal agencies. For the Haudenosaunee,
sovereignty is the backbone of their political
existence, and they take the rights and
responsibilities of sovereignty seriously.
Besides being well known throughout Indian
Country for their resolute stance on sovereignty,
the Haudenosaunee also are known as the
originators of lacrosse: since time immemorial,
Iroquois men have played lacrosse, or “ga-chee-qua-is.” To
the Haudenosaunee, ga-chee-qua-is is a
gift from the Creator, to be played for
His enjoyment as a medicine game that heals
and rejuvenates individuals and communities.
It is also a competitive game, played both
on the field (field lacrosse) and in enclosed
arenas (box lacrosse).
As a sport, lacrosse has grown increasingly
popular among non-Iroquois throughout the
twentieth century. Across the United States
and Canada, boys, girls, men, and women
play at primary education institutions,
colleges and universities, and in community
and even professional leagues. The game’s
popularity has also grown worldwide. Australia,
Canada, the Czech Republic, England, Germany,
Japan, Korea, Scotland, Sweden, the United
States, and Wales have all created national
lacrosse teams. These national teams are
members of the International Lacrosse Federation,
the international governing body of lacrosse.
In 1983, the United States National Collegiate
Athletic Association (NCAA) invited the
Haudenosaunee to field a team and play
an exhibition match at the National Lacrosse
Championships in Baltimore, Maryland. They
did, and were roundly defeated by the Canadian
national team. This loss, while disappointing,
mobilized the Iroquois into action. Team
members and coaches decided that, as the
originators of the game and as citizens
of the Iroquois Confederacy, they would
participate in international field lacrosse
competitions and re-capture their status
as the best lacrosse players in the world.
More importantly, they were determined
that their participation in competitive
lacrosse should stand as a symbol of their
sovereignty.
With the sanction of the Haudenosaunee
Grand Council of Chiefs, a dedicated group
of Iroquois citizens organized the Iroquois
Nationals Lacrosse Team to represent the
Confederacy in international competition.
They organized a board of directors; recruited
managers, coaches, and trainers; and held
try-outs for the hundreds of lacrosse players
from the six nations interested in playing
on the Iroquois Nationals Lacrosse Team.
It was the first American Indian national
sports team. As such, the Team decided
that when traveling outside of the United
States, its members would use their Haudenosaunee
passports—passports that are issued
by the Grand Council of Chiefs, whose capitol
has remained at the Onondaga Nation for
over one thousand years.
With a competitive and soundly organized
team in place, the forty-five-member Iroquois
Nationals Lacrosse Team turned its efforts
toward participating in international competition.
As straightforward as this might appear—after
all, the Iroquois created the sport and
introduced it to the world—the hurdles
were both high and numerous. Gaining acceptance
into the International Lacrosse Federation
(ILF) was among the first of the major
challenges the Iroquois Nationals encountered.
The ILF countered the Team’s petition
for membership with weighty demands. The
Iroquois repeatedly met and exceeded these
demands, even demonstrating their ability
to organize and host two international
competitions to which they invited the
Australian, Canadian, English, and US national
teams. Yet despite offering proof of athletic
and organizational expertise, the Iroquois
Nationals were barred from participating
in the 1986 ILF World Games in Toronto,
Canada. Still, the Team persevered and,
in 1987, the ILF recognized the Iroquois’ status
as a nation, and the Team was officially
welcomed as a full ILF member.
Additional challenges followed. Members
of the Iroquois Nationals were determined
to express their nations’ sovereignty
not only through admission into the International
Lacrosse Federation, but through the use
of Haudenosaunee passports for international
travel. Although it would have been much
simpler for the Iroquois Nationals to acquiesce
to US and foreign pressure to travel under
US passports, the Team, the Grand Council
of Chiefs, and the Clanmothers of the six
nations firmly believed that doing so would
undermine the Haudenosaunee’s inherent
sovereignty. In fact, the Haudenosaunee
passport minces no words: “You may
lose your Haudenosaunee nationality by
being naturalized in, or taking an oath
or making a declaration of allegiance to,
a foreign state.” Still, obtaining
passport approvals from the immigration
bureaucracies of the United States as well
as every country the team visits is a daunting
task. Prior to every international tournament,
the Team must introduce the Haudenosaunee
passport anew and arrange travel clearance
with the host nation prior to the Team’s
departure. Even when the tournament’s
host country willingly extends such recognition,
the clearances are not always transmitted
to the appropriate functionaries. Although
the negotiations are invariably time-consuming
and the process is difficult, the Team
and the Confederacy stand firm in their
insistence that other nations recognize
Iroquois sovereignty.
The Iroquois Nationals Lacrosse Team has
excelled in the most straightforward measure
of success: it regularly fields a world-class
lacrosse team. In the 1998 ILF Men’s
World Championships in Baltimore, Maryland,
the Iroquois Nationals placed fourth out
of eleven competing countries. In 1999,
the Iroquois Nationals team took the bronze
medal in the Under-19 Men’s World
Championships in Adelaide, Australia. That
same year, three Iroquois Nationals players
were honored through their inclusion on
the 1999 Ten Man All World Team. In 2000,
the Iroquois Nationals won the first annual
Jim Thorpe Award for Native America’s
highest excellence in sports. The Team’s
ability to endure and sustain the challenges
of competition at the international level
is particularly impressive given that the
Team draws its players from a pool that
is a fraction of the size of its competitors’.
The Iroquois Nationals Lacrosse Team’s
success on the lacrosse fields has changed
the way in which the game—and the
Iroquois—are perceived. Although
its efforts to join the ILF were met with
substantial resistance, the Team’s
benefit to the Federation is now widely
appreciated. The current president of the
ILF credits the Iroquois Nationals with
popularizing lacrosse: “The ILF and
its members firmly believe that the inclusion
of the Iroquois has been a benefit to the
sport in helping expand the sport internationally.” He
also recognizes that their play has resulted
in a deepening appreciation of the cultural
origins of the game among lacrosse players
and fans alike: “The exchange of
cultures that has taken place due to the
inclusion of the Iroquois team has been
a truly rewarding educational opportunity
for the many nations and players that are
involved in our sport.” In generating
respect for the origins of the game, the
Iroquois Nationals have ensured respect
for the broader Native American community.
The significance of the Iroquois Nationals
Lacrosse Team is felt at home as well as
abroad. Among the six nations of the Iroquois
Confederacy, the Team has succeeded in
sustaining the traditional meaning of lacrosse.
To them, lacrosse is a divine gift and
there is “medicine” in lacrosse
if the game is played traditionally. Specific
medicine games play an important role in
contemporary Iroquois community life. An
individual player may call for a medicine
game to bring blessings to a particular
person. For instance, if a player’s
sister is ill, he might call a medicine
game to bring her good health. Many players
will ask the spirit of an animal for guidance,
so that he may have the eyes of the hawk
or the agility of the deer. Thus, while
lacrosse is a sport pursued by non-Indian
amateur and professional players around
the world, it is still a medicine game
imbued with a special significance for
the Haudenosaunee.
Lacrosse also is viewed as a cultural
legacy that succeeds in teaching the lessons
of how to live a good life. Lacrosse demands
teamwork, leadership, commitment, sacrifice,
and, of course, physical prowess—virtues
that benefit the Iroquois people on and
off the playing field and long after the
athletic careers of its players wane. Coaches
and parents of young Iroquois boys recognize
that lacrosse teaches values regarding
competition and social interaction. Iroquois
Nationals players knowingly act as role
models for the youth in their respective
communities. As their season allows, Team
members conduct small clinics covering
game strategy and skills, sportsmanship,
and stories of lacrosse’s origins.
It is significant that most, if not all,
of the Grand Council of Chiefs is made
up of former lacrosse stars. For its part,
the Team’s board of directors recognizes
the game’s influence and wields it
to promote positive trends among the youth.
Considering substance abuse to be one of
the most dangerous problems facing Indians
across America, the board of directors
has instituted a zero tolerance policy
on drug use. In short, lacrosse serves
as the bond that brings the Iroquois together
as individuals and nations and, as such,
it is used for community advancement.
Lacrosse has deep cultural roots as well
as modern implications for the Haudenosaunee:
the game not only has a revered place in
Haudenosaunee art, religion, and society,
but the Iroquois Nationals Lacrosse Team
itself is an expression of Indian sovereignty.
Through its insistence on admittance to
the International Lacrosse Federation and
its difficult yet successful engagements
with the US and foreign governments to
recognize Iroquois passports, the Iroquois
Nationals take principled stands about
what it means to be self-governing and
sovereign. In doing so, the Iroquois Nationals
Lacrosse Team extends the role of lacrosse
in its players’ home nations from
being a primarily cultural and religious
touchstone to being an internationally
recognized symbol of sovereignty and self-government.
Other American Indian nations, indigenous
peoples, and indeed, nations everywhere
can look to the Haudenosaunee and their
Iroquois Nationals Lacrosse Team for evidence
of the symbolic and practical power of
tribal sovereignty.
Lessons: