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North American Indigenous Games

Multi-sport event


Summary

Multi-sport event

The North American Indigenous Games is a multi-sport event involving indigenous North American athletes staged intermittently since 1990. The games are governed by the North American Indigenous Games Council, a 26-member council of representatives from 13 provinces and territories in Canada and 13 regions in the United States.

History

In 1971, the Native Summer Games held in Enoch, Alberta, Canada drew 3,000 participants competing in 13 sports and many cultural events.

In 1973, the Western Canada Native Winter Games were held on the Blood Reserve in Kainai, Alberta, Canada.

In 1975, a meeting of the National Indian Athletic Association was held in Reno, Nevada, where it was decided to organize games for indigenous peoples. John Fletcher, a Peigan from Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, and Willie Littlechild, a Cree of the Ermineskin Tribe at Hobbema, Alberta, Canada, attended; John Fletcher is credited for his support towards having the games, as presented by Mr. Littlechild.

In 1977, the idea to host large-scale indigenous games took another step forward in Sweden at the Annual Assembly of the World Council of Indigenous Peoples. Willie Littlechild presented the motion to host international indigenous games. It was unanimously passed. A Brazilian elder was reportedly so moved by this that he presented Willie Littlechild with a war arrow representing peace in his tribe. Advising it be pointed to the ground, this arrow would direct anything evil toward the underground. It is now part of the sacred ceremonial run.

The goal of the games was to improve the quality of life for indigenous peoples by supporting self-determined sports and cultural activities.

Former Chairperson Charles Wood stated "The vision of the NAIG, from the very beginning, along with my brothers, Willie Littlechild of Ermineskin First Nation at Hobbema, and Big John Fletcher of Peigan in Southern Alberta, was one of our interest and concern about what was happening among the young people in all of our communities. . . We took it upon ourselves to try and find something constructive for the young people to look forward to. And, what it was eventually, was that we would put together a plan for a Games through which the young Aboriginal people could come together to excel in their athletic field of endeavour and to come together to do other things: to make new friendships, to renew old ones, and so on..."

The first North American Indigenous Games (or "NAIG") were held in 1990 in Edmonton, Alberta, followed by Prince Albert, Saskatchewan, in 1993, Blaine, Minnesota, in 1995, Victoria, British Columbia, in 1997, Winnipeg, Manitoba, in 2002, Denver, Colorado, in 2006 and Cowichan, British Columbia, in 2008. The 2011 games were to be held in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, but about a year before the games were to be held, Milwaukee withdrew its host application due to the lack of financial backers. Other arrangements, however, were made, and games were indeed held in Milwaukee in July 2011 on a smaller scale (dubbed the United States Indigenous Games). The 2014 games took place in Regina, Saskatchewan followed by the 2017 games in Toronto, Ontario.

In the 2006 games, 10,000 athletes from the United States and Canada took part with more than 1,000 tribes represented. In addition to sporting events, the games included a parade and a variety of cultural performances. The opening ceremonies were held at Invesco Field at Mile High and the closing ceremonies were held at Skyline Park.

Approximately 5,000 athletes from the United States and Canada took part in the 2014 games, in Regina, Saskatchewan, (July 20–27, 2014) with more than 756 tribes represented. In addition to sporting events, the games included a large cultural village at the First Nations University of Canada and a variety of cultural performances throughout the host city. The opening ceremonies were held at Mosaic Stadium at Taylor Field and the closing ceremonies were held at the First Nations University of Canada campus. A large and violent storm went through the cultural village on July 24, nearly destroying everything except for the tipis. Later, over 300 volunteers worked through the night to clean it up in time for the following days activities.

Editions

EditionYearHostLocationNotesResultsOverall winner
11990CanadaEdmonton, AlbertaFirst NAIG, 3,000 participants in 15 sports37 cultural groups and ceremonial runSaskatchewan Team Saskatchewan
21993CanadaPrince Albert, Saskatchewan4,400 participants in 15 sportsTraditional powwowSaskatchewan Team Saskatchewan
31995United StatesBlaine, Minnesota8,500 participants in 17 sports2,500 cultural performersSaskatchewan Team Saskatchewan
41997CanadaVictoria, British Columbia5,000 participants in 16 sports3,000 cultural participantsSaskatchewan Team Saskatchewan
52002CanadaWinnipeg, Manitoba6,500 participants in 16 sports3,000 cultural participantsManitoba Team Manitoba
62006United StatesDenver, Colorado10,000 participants in 16 sportsSaskatchewan Team Saskatchewan
72008CanadaCowichan, British Columbia4,700 participants in 14 sports300 artists, 2000 tribal journey participants, spirit poleSaskatchewan Team Saskatchewan
82011United StatesMilwaukee, Wisconsin2011 NAIG were cancelled. The Milwaukee host society withdrew their involvement as host for 2011 NAIG in June 2010. They resumed instead with hosting the "inaugural U.S. Indigenous Games"N/A (Game was cancelled)
92014CanadaRegina, Saskatchewan5,000 participants in 15 sportstraditional indigenous activities, cultural village, lance runBritish Columbia Team British Columbia
102017CanadaToronto, Ontario2017 edition]] of the World Indigenous GamesBritish Columbia Team British Columbia
112023CanadaHalifax, Nova ScotiaThe games were originally scheduled to be held in 2020 but had to be rescheduled for July 2023 as a result of the COVID-19 pandemic.Saskatchewan Team Saskatchewan
122027CanadaCalgary, AlbertaThe games were awarded to Calgary in 2023 but the hosting rights were withdrawn in August 2025.

Sports

Gold, silver, and bronze medals were awarded in sixteen sports:

  • Archery
  • Badminton
  • Basketball
  • Baseball
  • Boxing
  • Canoeing
  • Golf
  • Lacrosse
  • Rifle shooting
  • Soccer
  • Softball
  • Swimming
  • Tae Kwon Do
  • Track and field and cross-country running
  • Volleyball
  • Wrestling

Total medals

Team№ gamesTotal
Saskatchewan8708
Alberta8356
Manitoba8292
British Columbia8331
Ontario8281
Eastern Door and North6175
Yukon890
Northwest Territories854
Washington884
New Mexico459
Wisconsin655
Iroquois New York750
North Dakota557
Colorado639
Arizona540
Nova Scotia418
Minnesota530
Oklahoma333
Connecticut633
New Brunswick627
Newfoundland and Labrador215
South Dakota520
Quebec222
Florida Florida68
Maine37
Oregon411
Nunavut410
Michigan49
Iowa49
Idaho19
California46
Montana49
Prince Edward Island33
Utah21
North Carolina32
Mississippi22
Kansas10
Georgia (U.S. state) Georgia11
Nebraska10
CAN Maritimes10

Notes

References

References

  1. Laskaris, Sam. (January 16, 2019). "NAIG host society appoints CEO for 2020 Halifax competition". Anishinabek News.
  2. Gilligan, Melissa. (July 21, 2023). "2027 North American Indigenous Games to be held in Calgary". CTV News.
  3. (15 August 2025). "Calgary host society says 'unreasonable demands' led to loss of 2027 North American Indigenous Games". CBC News.
  4. [http://naig2014.gems.pro/Result/MedalList.aspx 2014 NAIG Medal Standings]
  5. [http://www.masrc.com/docs/naig_2008_medal_standings.pdf 2008 NAIG Medal Standings]
  6. [http://www.masrc.com/docs/naig_2006_medal_standings.pdf 2006 NAIG Medal Standings]
  7. [http://www.masrc.com/docs/naig_2002_medal_standings.pdf 2002 NAIG Medal Standings]
  8. [http://www.masrc.com/docs/naig_1997_medal_standings.pdf 1997 NAIG Medal Standings]
  9. [http://www.masrc.com/docs/naig_1995_medal_standings.pdf 1995 NAIG Medal Standings]
  10. [http://www.masrc.com/docs/naig_1993_medal_standings.pdf 1993 NAIG Medal Standings]
  11. [http://www.masrc.com/docs/naig_1990_medal_standings.pdf 1990 NAIG Medal Standings]
Wikipedia Source

This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.

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