Back in the game: with American Indians reasserting their heritage through lacrosse--a game invented by their ancestors--they're helping to make it one of the country's fastest-growing sports.

AuthorHu, Winnie
PositionNATIONAL

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Tim Glass's mother tells him that he was born with a lacrosse stick in his hand, because his ancestors invented the game. Tim, 14, and his two younger brothers sometimes practice their chosen sport in T-shirts that say, "It's in our blood."

In Oneida Territory, an area of upstate New York that belongs to the Oneida Indians, the Glass brothers are part of a new generation of American Indians reasserting their heritage through a game invented by their ancestors but more recently associated with prep schools and elite colleges.

In four years, the North American Minor Lacrosse Association has grown into a league of six American Indian teams in New York State, with 1,000 players from ages 3 to 20 competing in different age divisions. Some tribes have used profits from their casinos to hire coaches and referees, buy equipment, and refurbish playing fields.

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Games often draw hundreds of spectators for day-long picnics and festivities, helping unite disparate tribes in a culture often splintered by ancient and modern rivalries.

"It's not an elite sport to us; it's a way of life," says Randi Rourke, editor of Indian Country Today, a leading Native American newspaper. Rourke says that fathers and grandfathers often present lacrosse sticks to baby boys.

'AN IDENTITY FOR US'

Brian Patterson, president of the United South and Eastern Tribes, a group that represents 24 tribes primarily east of the Mississippi River, says the renewed interest in lacrosse is part of a broader movement to revive Indian languages and traditions. He has encouraged young people like his 11-year-old son, Schuyler, to draw strength and courage from lacrosse as their ancestors did, and ward off modern-day pressures and problems like drugs and alcohol.

"It's more than a game; it's truly an identity for us," says Patterson.

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Even the equipment is part of the tradition: Ronald Patterson, an Oneida coach, teaches young players the painstaking, yearlong process of making the wooden sticks by hand.

Beyond the reservations, lacrosse is among the country's fastest-growing sports. The number of players on organized teams jumped to 426,000 last year from 254,000 in 2001, according to U.S. Lacrosse, a nonprofit group that promotes the sport.

American Indians have played lacrosse for centuries. Missionaries documented their contests as long ago as the 1630s. Such early matches could involve hundreds of men and last for days...

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