How much do you know about Lacrosse? Until I watched this informative documentary, I only knew it was a sport. I had no idea where it came from or what was involved in playing it. As I watched this film I learned that the white man picked up this sport from the Iroquois tribes over 150 years ago but only just "allowed" the tribes to compete with the white man's teams in the last 20 years. Before that they weren't allowed to join in because they were classified as "Professionals." A tribal elder points out that, to his tribe, the three most important things are: 1. Family. 2. Work/Education. 3. Lacrosse.
When the documentary team met with one of the elders, he observed, "From 1613 to the present in a few minutes? ...but that's how you do things." Then he smiled.
I learned:
Back in the 1600s the game was originally a three day religious ceremony for the Six Nations (Seneca, Cayuga, Onondaga, Tuscarora, Oneida and Mohawk) with hundreds of men participating, but has been modified and codified over the centuries. The white man plays lacrosse, but he does not associate it with its origins.
The underlying rationale for his rejection is "discovery," which means if someone "discovers" your land, it becomes his, you don't count even if a number of treaties are signed. In 1493 Alexander Pope said the lands were empty of Christians, therefore empty.
I could go on and on, because this is endlessly fascinating, but please see this one. It is interesting, exciting and humorous. I particularly enjoyed the vocalists, Joanne Shenandoah and Theresa "Bear" Fox. One elder, a former lacrosse super-star who is handsome and eloquent, says "We have lost many games, but we have never been defeated." I believe him!
IN THEATERS May 26, 2017
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Please watch the trailer:
http://www.imdb.com/video/imdb/vi1219213593
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