Alwyn Morris, 1984 Olympic gold medallist, shares the Olympic Flame with local children Tuesday, December 8, 2009 as he carries it through the Mohawk town of Kahnawake. (Canadian Press photo)

Alwyn Morris, 1984 Olympic gold medallist, shares the Olympic Flame with local children earlier this month as he carries it through the Mohawk town of Kahnawake. (Canadian Press photo)



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And speaking of Native athletes (See previous post about Louis Sockalexis, the first Native American to play Major League baseball) – it’s been a full quarter-century since a Native American competitor won an Olympic gold medal.

Jim Thorpe, who is Sac and Fox, who won gold medals in 1912 in Stockholm, and Billy Mills (Oglala Lakota) who won gold in 1964 in Tokyo.

And, in the 1984 Games in Los Angeles, Canada’s Alwyn Morris, who is Mohawk from Kahnawake, Quebec, and his partner Hugh Fisher won the men’s 1,000-meter doubles kayak race.

When Morris won, he held an eagle feather high As he tells Canadian Press, here, that salute meant everything to him.

It honored the grandparents who raised him, and his heritage as an aboriginal.

“It was important for me to be self identified in order to share that with the other part of who I am,” he says.

So it’s frustrating to report there are no aboriginal athletes on the teams that Canada will send to the 2010 Olympics in Vancouver.

Aaron Marchant, of British Columbia’s Squamish Nation aims to change that.

In 2004, he helped develop First Nations Snowboard Team with the goal of putting a snowboarder in the Olympics. The program has snowboarders training on nine mountains in British Columbia and one in Washington State, he tells CP.

“What we’re doing is very positive,” he said. “We’re striving to get more athletes to have the support to get to that level. I definitely see our program progressing.”

For his part, Morris says that it’s important aboriginal people are being included in the staging of the Games, something he says could inspire indigenous athletes.

“If the Four Host Nations for the 2010 Games show that there is legacy, that there is ability, and it’s more than just being the facade of the Olympic Games in Vancouver,” he says, “that’s going to lend a tremendous amount of support for athletes who are saying, ‘You know what, that’s where we were in 2010, and in 2020 we’re at the top of the podium.”

Gwen Florio

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This entry was posted on Saturday, December 26th, 2009 at 12:51 pm and is filed under Jim Thorpe, Kahanawake, Mohawk, Native sports. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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Keep Olympics Authentic and Accountable to Aboriginals

Please, we need your support,

We are Aboriginal producers of Authentic Aboriginal Products in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, home of the 2010 Winter Olympic games. We define our products as Authentic in that they are designed, produced, and distributed by us, Aboriginal People, with the benefits going back to our communities where they are so desperately needed.

We have been under siege by competing non-Aboriginal companies taking our culture, mass producing it overseas, and selling it for cheap.

Unfortunately the Vancouver Organizing Committee for the 2010 Olympic games
(VANOC) is one of these competitors. VANOC has branded the term “Authentic Aboriginal Products” to mean their licensed products displaying Aboriginal graphics but supplied by non-Aboriginal companies, and originating overseas where labour and environmental standards are less stringent. They have branded the term “Authentic Aboriginal Products” so aggressively that when you Google these words in any order you are taken directly to the Olympic online store. At the same time, VANOC has virtually excluded from their licensing program truly Authentic Aboriginal Products – those designed, produced, and distributed by First Nations people.

If you find this behaviour unacceptable we ask that you read and sign the following e-petition, then pass this along to a friend:
http://www.gopetition.com/online/32954.html (This is a reputable site and there is an anonymous option for those concerned about revealing their info
publicly)

They can ignore us, but it is our hope they won’t ignore you.

For more information please visit our Blog at:
http://www.trulyauthentic.wordpress.com. It will be documenting our campaign as it evolves.

Thank you so very much

Shain Jackson

President

Spirit Works Limited

Unit 4 – 1500 Railway Street

North Vancouver, B.C.

V7J 1B5

Tel: 604 982 0024

Cel: 604 727 0018

Fx: 778 340 0615

website: http://www.spiritworkslimited.com

December 28th, 2009 at 8:14 am

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