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American Indian
Report
Taking Center Stage
Former Olympian and Utah Tribes
Team Up to
Highlight Tribes During World Games
By Randi Hicks Rowe
Utah Indian Tribes and 1968 Olympic alpine
skier Suzy Chaffee have formed a partnership to spotlight Indians
during the Winter Games in Salt Lake City in 2002.
"It's really exciting." Said Rose Ann
Abrahamson, a Lemhi Shosoni who is one of the leaders of the
Native American 2002 Foundation, which is spearheading Native
activities at the games. "Things are moving forward quickly."
The vision for the Native American 2003
Foundation came form Larry Blackhair, a Northern Ute, its
organizer and chairman.
"I admire him for his vision and his
endeavors in spearheading the effort to include Indians in all
aspects of the Olympics," Abrahamson said.
The Indians will participate in various venues that
highlight their culture, including the opening ceremonies,
Abrahamson said. Native dancing ceremonies are already taking place at Olympic
test events. In
November, an Indian dance and prayer ceremony opened the Park
City's Americas World Cup.
"This ceremony was an ideal way to start
this important warm-up season. The Native prayers for the mountain
and competitors with world champion dancers gave everyone a
lift." Said Ed Fraze, Park City event coordinator.
The dancers were made to feel very welcome
and the European athletes and coaches were especially gracious,
said Abrahamson. The
performers were photographed with Sonja Nef, a slalom winner.
"This is the way of Utah's First Nations to welcome
world athletes. And visitors on behalf of Park City Resort and our
ancestors, who lived here for thousands of years," she said.
The welcoming group included a total of 10 leaders and
dancers in full regalia form Utah and Idaho.
Southern Paiute Johnny Lehi blessed the mountain in Paiute,
Ute and Navajo.
With the success at the World Cup, the group
plans to do similar ceremonies at other warm-up events.
The partnership is seeking sponsors for other projects at
the games that will show the world Indian culture and its emphasis
on sustaining the environment.
"The world being able to see nature through
the eyes of a Native American is what will save the planet,"
said Chaffee, who is working with the partnership and also is a
co-founder of the Native Voices Foundation, which aims to create
"joyful unity through sports to heal Mother Earth for all our
children."
European and Asian athletes at previous
Olympic games told surveyors that what they most wanted to learn
about the United Sates was Indian history and culture and about
the West, said Abrahamson. Utah's
location and its Indian population were a major reason for its
being chosen the site for the 2002 games, she said.
Australia highlighted the culture of its aboriginal peoples
last year. "The
United States should extend an even greater appreciation," she
said.
Chaffee's documentary, "Red Road to the
Olympics," which depicts a series of Native ski healing
ceremonies and celebrations, will air during television coverage
of the games. In
these events, Chaffee and others teach Indian youth to ski.
"The bonding between people who do sports
is strong," said Chaffee who has connected through the years
with former Olympians, including former Sen. Bill Bradley, a
member of the 1964 gold-medal-winning basketball team, and boxer
Muhammad Ali, who as Cassius Clay won a gold medal in 1960. "It
builds trust."
Abrahamson, herself a world champion
traditional dancer, muses that events such as these, which nurture
the athletic spirit of Indian youth, might turn one into an
Olympic hopeful. A
family descendant of Sacajawea, she has worked with Chaffee on
several other Indian heritage projects.
Just as Sacajawea helped promote unity by guiding
Meriwether Lewis and William Clark on their expedition in 1805 and
1806. Abrahamson is "unifying the land in spirit through her
work," Chaffee said.
At age 5, Chaffee worked with her first coach
-Joe Jones, an Abenaki. Since
becoming the United States' top downhiller at the Olympics in
Grenoble, France, and a three-time World Freestyle champion, she
has tried to give back to the Indian people who love the beauty of
nature and the joy of sports, but often can't afford to ski, she
said.
In 1996, she and Southern Ute Unity Leader
Alden Naranjo founded NVF, a partnership between Indian nations,
U.S. ski towns and athletes.
NVF has named Native Americans the Most Valuable Players of
the Millennium for their track record in guarding Mother Earth and
in inspiring and helping a many white American leaders in the
major rights crusades of the century, such as women's suffrage,
the American Revolution and the struggle for peace.
Chaffee, also known and "Suzy Chapstick"
from her famous 19070's lip balm commercial, has been active in
reforming Olympic rules. She
has served on the board of the U.S. Olympic Committee and the
President's Council on fitness for four presidents.
The Navajo call her "The Snow Woman."
January 2001 - American Indian
Report
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