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Idaho State Journal
Olympian champions
American Indian culture
Foundation used sports to bridge culture gaps
BY Emily Jones-Journal Writer
POCATELLO-Olympian Suzy Chaffee wants to
give back to the people she says have shaped her life.
Chaffee said she fell in love with American
Indian culture when her father would tell her stories he heard
while fishing with Indians in Canada.
Her first ski coach, who showed her the way to downhill
race in the 1968 Olympics, was Abenaki Indian Joe Jones.
That is why Chaffee, co-founded the Native
Voices Foundation, an organization that uses sports to bridge
culture gaps and help American Indian youth.
"She's been able to open many doors to
the Native Americans," said Native American 2002 cultural
consultant and spokesperson Rose Ann Abrahamson.
Chaffee, along with Indian tribes in
Colorado, Utah, Washington, Oregon and Idaho, has been hosting
healing ceremonies at ski areas across the West.
In the ceremonies, tribal members dance and bless the ski
mountain. In exchange for the blessing, Chaffee teaches the singers and
dancers to ski.
The ceremony, Chaffee said, helps people
understand nature in a different way.
"These are the guardians of Mother Earth,
" she said, "When we did the mountain blessing, people said
they saw the mountain in a different light."
Recently, members of the Shoshone-Bannock
tribes and others took part in a healing ceremony at the opening
of the World Cup ski races in Park City, Utah.
The ceremony, Chaffee said, will help show the Salt Lake
Olympic Committee the importance of Indian culture in Olympic
ceremonies.
"It's all been talk for five years and
now we had an event at an Olympic site," she said.
"If people don't have any experience with Native
Americans, that beginning is crucial.
For two cultures that haven't been together for 400
years, this is big."
After the huge success of showcasing
Aboriginal culture on the 2000- Olympics, the Salt Lake Olympic
Committee is looking to include Indian culture in their events.
Although things are sill in the planning
stages, Abrahamson said Native American 2002 and the Salt Lake
Olympic Committee are making great progress.
Adding an Indian touch to the Olympics will
be popular for many Europeans, who love the culture of the West,
Abrahamson said.
"No.1, they want to see the Indians. No. 2
they want to see the West," she said.
Chaffee sees the Olympics as a chance for the
United States and Indians to bridge communication gaps.
"Here we can bring American together.
This is a great opportunity for our country," she said.
 
Suzy Chaffee, left, and Rose Ann Abrahamson, right, are working together to include American Indian traditions in
Olympic ceremonies.
Idaho State Journal, Thursday, November 30,
2000
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