Current:Home > NewsPresident Joe Biden and the White House support Indigenous lacrosse team for the 2028 Olympics -MoneySpot
President Joe Biden and the White House support Indigenous lacrosse team for the 2028 Olympics
View
Date:2025-04-15 06:22:33
President Joe Biden is pushing to allow the Indigenous nation that invented lacrosse to play under its own flag when the sport returns to the Olympics in 2028.
Biden’s position, being announced Wednesday at the White House Tribal Nations Summit, is a request for the International Olympic Committee to allow the Haudenosaunee Nationals to compete as its own team at the Los Angeles Games.
That would require the IOC to make an exception to a rule that permits teams playing only as part of an official national Olympic committee to compete in the Olympics. The Haudenosaunee have competed as their own team at a number of international events since 1990.
“We’re hopeful the IOC will see it our way, as well,” Tom Perez, the White House senior adviser and director of intergovernmental affairs, told The Associated Press. “If we’re successful, it won’t simply be the flag of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy that marches in the Olympics, it will be the flag of Indigenous people across the world.”
The Haudenosaunee, formerly known as the Iroquois, is a collection of six Indigenous nations whose territory covers upstate New York and adjacent sections of Canada.
Shortly after the IOC announced in October that lacrosse was returning to the Olympics, it reiterated its stance about teams having to compete under the flag of an established Olympic committee. It suggested the U.S. and Canadian Olympic committees would have to find a way to include Indigenous athletes on their respective national teams.
Carving out certain spots for the athletes on U.S. and Canadian teams would create logistical problems of its own in the selection process. It wasn’t the ultimate goal of Haudenosaunee leaders when they pushed for lacrosse to come back to the Olympics.
“The ultimate goal is for the Haudenosaunee to win a gold medal,” said Leo Nolan, the executive director of the Haudenosaunee Nationals. “It’s a delicate situation because there are so many moving parts to this whole thing.”
But, he said, if the goal at the Olympics is to showcase the best in every sport, the Haudenosaunee should have a place in the games. The current world rankings have the Haudenosaunee men in third, behind the U.S. and Canada.
Working with World Lacrosse, the sport’s international federation, organizers for the Los Angeles Olympics leaned heavily into the Indigenous history of the sport to sell the IOC on bringing lacrosse back to the games as a medal event for the first time since 1908.
In around the year 1100, Indigenous communities in northeastern North America invented the first version of lacrosse, playing games that could involve more than 100 men on a side. The sport was viewed as a way to prepare for wars, but also as a religious experience and even as a tool used to settle disputes.
“We look forward to continuing to collaborate with the International Olympic Committee, LA28, and the U.S. and Canadian Olympic Committees to explore potential pathways for the Haudenosaunee to participate in the Olympics while respecting the Olympic Games framework,” World Lacrosse said in a statement Wednesday.
It also released a statement from Haudenosaunee player Fawn Porter, who said the government’s support “will help build additional momentum as we continue our journey as Haudenosaunee people with a desire to bring the medicine of lacrosse to the world.”
This summer, the Haudenosaunee started reaching out to the White House to get Biden’s support. Perez said the U.S. is working with Canada to support inclusion in the 2028 Olympics.
“I can’t think of a more worthy candidate for inclusion than a confederation that literally invented the sport and has some of the most elite men and women in the sport in their nation,” Perez said.
___
AP Olympics: https://apnews.com/hub/2024-paris-olympic-games
veryGood! (5)
Related
- Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
- Man is accused of holding girlfriend captive in university dorm for days
- Libyan city buries thousands in mass graves after flood as mayor says death toll could triple
- Utah GOP Sen. Mitt Romney, former presidential candidate and governor, won’t seek reelection in 2024
- Questlove charts 50 years of SNL musical hits (and misses)
- Florida health officials warn against new COVID booster, contradicting CDC guidance
- Peso Pluma threatened by Mexican cartel ahead of Tijuana concert: 'It will be your last show'
- True-crime junkies can get $2,400 for 24 hours of binge-watching in MagellanTV contest
- Can Bill Belichick turn North Carolina into a winner? At 72, he's chasing one last high
- Man is accused of holding girlfriend captive in university dorm for days
Ranking
- Louvre will undergo expansion and restoration project, Macron says
- US semiconductor production is ramping up. But without STEM workforce, we'll lose the race.
- California bill would lift pay for fast-food workers to $20 an hour
- Police officers arrested after van prisoner was paralyzed seek program to have charges erased
- US appeals court rejects Nasdaq’s diversity rules for company boards
- Ex-CIA employee snared earlier in classified info bust found guilty of possessing child abuse images
- Jury awards $100,000 to Kentucky couple denied marriage license by ex-County Clerk Kim Davis
- Liev Schreiber Welcomes Third Baby, His First With Girlfriend Taylor Neisen
Recommendation
'Survivor' 47 finale, part one recap: 2 players were sent home. Who's left in the game?
What do you do if you find a lost dog or cat? Ring's new Pet Tag lets you contact owners.
UFOs, little green men: Mexican lawmakers hear testimony on possible existence of extraterrestrials
World Cup referee Yoshimi Yamashita among first women match officials at Asian Cup
Will the 'Yellowstone' finale be the last episode? What we know about Season 6, spinoffs
Delaware man gets 7 1/2-year federal term in carjacking of congresswoman’s SUV in Philadelphia
Haitian officials meet in Dominican Republic to prevent border closings over canal dispute
University of North Carolina lifts lockdown after reports of armed person on campus