Article 6W8W2 ‘We play for Indian country’: how the Bilingual Basketball league is preserving Indigenous languages

‘We play for Indian country’: how the Bilingual Basketball league is preserving Indigenous languages

by
Alan Chazaro
from US news | The Guardian on (#6W8W2)

Despite drastic cuts by the Trump administration, Native American coaches are teaching and defending traditions

Long before Michael Jordan changed the sport of basketball, another Jordon transformed the National Basketball Association's (NBA) history by breaking the league's racial barrier as its first Native American player.

In 1956, Phil the Flash" Jordon, a descendant of the Wailaki and Nomlaki tribes, was drafted by the New York Knicks and played 10 seasons in the league. Though he may not carry the same cultural cache as other hoopers throughout professional basketball's century-plus existence, Jordon embodies a longstanding Native American fixation on the sport - especially at the community level. Throughout the years, Native Americans have embraced basketball and made it their own. One way they're doing so today is with rez ball", a lightning-fast style of basketball associated with Native American teams.

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