7.15.2010

Iroquois Nationals Lacrosse

This is bigger than just lacrosse. If anyone out there has been following the news recently this is the year that the World Lacrosse Championships are being held in England, which only happens every four years. Well, the Iroquois Nationals are ranked fourth in the world and are being refused entry or reentry, however you want to look at it because they are traveling on their own passports, which they have been doing for some time now. I know faithkeeper Oren Lyons travels internationally with his Haudenosaunee passport, and the countries he visits honors that document. The last time I knew he traveled on that passport was back in 2006/07 (if memory serves) when I was responsible for recording, editing, and the DVD authoring of a yearlong educational lecture series entitled, The Onondaga Land Rights and Our Common Future, part I. Oren said so in his own words that he just made it back in time for the lecture having flown back to the US and going through customs, the customs agent said he hadn't seen, "one of these passports" in a long time. Now, this happened five or six years after the infamous 9/11 that got the U.S. all diligent about homeland security, if he could reenter the U.S. with the Haudenosaunee passport why can't Our lacrosse team exit and enter? Maybe Oren had a reentry visa? I'm not sure of that detail. I digress.

Whether the Iroquois Nationals make it to England to play in the World Lacrosse Championships is really only part of the issue. I haven't heard word one of any other country standing in solidarity with the Haudenosaunee and not attending the games. It would seem at least Ireland would be supportive given their plight with colonization. What's at stake here are the issues of sovereignty and identity. The U.S. says the team can travel to England on a U.S. passport that the U.S. would be more than happy to supply, but in doing so they negate the nationality of the individual players, which was protected by the Indian Citizenship Act of 1924 allowing Native Americans the right to vote in effect making them citizens of three sovereigns (tribal, federal, state), that wasn't granted in the fourteenth amendment, and the Indian Reorganization Act 1934 reestablished or appears to have reestablished tribal governments. These are U.S. laws that maintain Indigenous identity and sovereignty, which at this point in time are being challenged and reinterpreted by the U.S. to block a group of world class athletes from competing. They definitely are very menacing individuals and prove threatening to the international security of the U.S., which, let's not forget, allowed Tareq and Michaele Salahi entry into a Presidential State dinner in 2009. I'm all for secure borders, whatever that lofty and intangible concept may be, but denying access to the Iroquois Nationals to compete in England is not a battle one would think the U.S. would have chosen to fight, given the true asinine aspect of the entire issue. The Iroquois Nationals want to maintain their identity and sovereignty by not falling victim to colonization once again. Most people probably don't even realize that colonization exists, given the term post-colonial, but in effect it does exist, this recent issue is proof positive that colonization is working strong in America. Post-colonialism is a fallacy in the U.S.

Even with the assistance of Secretary of State, Hilary Rodham Clinton intervening with a letter previously requested by England for the reentry of the team back into the U.S. England has now changed its mind pertaining to that specific stipulation. Thank you England for not keeping your word.

Let Our players traverse the borders so they can compete, they aren't a national security threat, they will never end up on a terrorist watch list, nor do they want anything to do with harming the U.S., many of these players' relatives were here helping the colonialists battle against the crown, some may have fought with the French, some with the crown its self, but their relations have also fought in both World Wars, Korea, Vietnam and Iraq, protecting the very same borders these wars were waged to protect and the very same borders they are being denied travel.

News Articles pertaining to this specific situation:

http://www.syracuse.com/news/index.ssf/2010/07/iroquois_nationals_our_plan_is.html

http://www.cnn.com/2010/SPORT/07/14/sport.iroquois.passport.controversy/index.html

http://www.nydailynews.com/news/national/2010/07/12/2010-07-12_iroquois_lacrosse_team_banned_from_flying_overseas_us_refuses_to_recognize_tribe.html

http://www.longislandpress.com/2010/07/14/iroquois-nationals-lacrosse-team-vsiroquois-nationals-lacrosse-team-vs-america/

http://iroquoisnationals.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=94:nationals-media-re-&catid=35:statistics

1 comment:

  1. Is this related to the whippin the Iroquois put on them in Revolutionary War? Is it possible?

    ReplyDelete