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LACROSSE ARTICLES
"Little Brother of
War"
By Adele Conover
Lacrosse - Little Brother
of War
Smithsonian Magazine December
1997
Lacrosse sticks were tools of the trade in a
rugged Indian game now growing popular around
the world
"Sticks"
such as those at left were the principal weapons
used in a semi-sacred ball sport variously known
as "They Bump Hips" or the "Little
Brother of War" that American Indians believe
was given to them by the Creator sometime in ages
past. This pair is part of the American Indian
exhibit in the Smithsonian's Arts and Industries
Building. They were made only a century or so
ago by Tuscarora Iroquois craftsmen using hickory
and rawhide, the wood for their curved heads steamed
for hours, then bent around a crook-shaped block.
More than three feet long and weighing a couple
of pounds, they would seem unwieldy to modern
lacrosse players, who pass the ball around and
whack at each other with 12-ounce sticks of plastic,
titanium and nylon. But they are symbols of triumph
for a Native American culture that has otherwise
been largely ignored, if not eradicated, by the
modern white world. Year by year lacrosse grows
more popular in North America (there are some
2,000 high school and more than 500 college teams
in the United States alone) as well as in other
parts of the globe from Japan to Germany and the
Czech Republic. (When the Czechs first took up
the game in the late 1970s, they reportedly used
as a guide George Catlin's famous 1834 painting
of Choctaws playing the game.) Yet lacrosse remains
a uniquely Indian sport, requiring fierce competitiveness,
speed and endurance, remarkable dexterity and
tolerance of pain.
These days, of course, it is not lacrosse but
professional football--with hockey as a close
second--that people might reasonably describe
as the "Little Brother of War." As played
today, men's lacrosse involves ten players per
team and lasts 60 minutes in a space roughly the
size of a football field. It is still a game of
hard knocks and bruises, played with fast-paced,
passionate zeal by men and women. A remarkable
witness to the demands and fascinations of the
game is football's legendary running back Jim
Brown. "Lacrosse is my favorite game,"
says Brown. "It takes tremendous endurance
and skill." 
According to Rick Hill, Sr., a lacrosse stalwart
and a professor of Native American studies at
the State University of New York at Buffalo, little
is known about the two Smithsonian sticks. But
studies by Smithsonian researcher Thomas Vennum,
Jr., author of American Indian Lacrosse: Little
Brother of War (Smithsonian Press, 1994), suggest
that in design lacrosse sticks are descendants
of war clubs.
The butt of one elaborately carved stick at the
University of Pennsylvania, crafted a century
and a half ago, represents a hand holding a ball.
Alongside it on the shaft is a carving of a handshake.
The clasped hands, Vennum says, are not necessarily
friendly. They may be symbolic of a dance in which
warriors clasped hands to "strengthen themselves
. . . as protective medicine" for battle.
Some experts regard the carved ball in the hand
as some kind of medicine ball, but Vennum thinks
it is also linked to the ball end of war clubs,
often carved as if held in the mouth of a snake
or the claws of a bird of prey. The idea was that
when such clubs were used in battle, the snake
or hawk symbolically loosed its grip, sending
the ball flying through the air to strike an enemy's
head and kill him.
Sometimes the ball was carved as a human head
that would fly off the club's handle and smack
an enemy brave. One Iroquois legend tells of a
flying head pursuing a whole family, bent on its
annihilation. At the last second the ball is caught
and thrown to its death in a vat of boiling bear
grease.
As the game was played by its original inventors,
from 30 to 50 players might take part on vast
ball fields without sidelines whose variable length
was determined by both teams prior to the match.
Games lasted for days at times, and in some tribes
players and nonplayers alike bet ponies, fortunes
in fur and beadwork, even wives and children,
on the outcome.
Early French and English settlers at first were
both startled and horrified by the game. "Almost
everything short of murder is allowable,"
one noted. "If one were not told beforehand
that they were playing," another wrote, "one
would certainly believe that they were fighting."
Soon, however, they fell under the spell of the
game, learning to watch (and place side bets)
among themselves. So much so that lacrosse played
a role during the period of Pontiac's Rebellion
in which several Indian nations fought to reclaim
lands from occupying British forces in what is
now the Midwest. In 1763, during King George III's
birthday celebration, Indians staged a game outside
Fort Michilimackinac on Lake Michigan. While His
Majesty's soldiers were caught up in the game's
progress, warriors took the fort.
The later history of the "Little Brother
of War" was sometimes as contentious as the
relationship between Indians and Euro-Americans.
According to U.S. Lacrosse, the Baltimore-based
national governing body of the sport, white Canadians
were playing as early as 1839. By 1856 in Montreal
the first non-Indian team had been organized,
and in 1860 a Canadian dentist, Dr. William George
Beers, wrote the first Europeanized rules.
For a while lacrosse was promoted as the national
game of Canada. Native American teams toured Europe
playing exhibition games, including one for the
benefit of Queen Victoria. Then, in 1880, the
National Lacrosse Association of Canada banned
Indians from championship play--officially on
the grounds that the Indians were paid "professionals"
not eligible for "amateur" sports. By
that time the game was catching on in North American
prep schools and colleges, with a scattering of
Indian varsity players at such schools as Dartmouth
and (later) Syracuse.
Today in Indian communities all over North America
at the first sign of spring youngsters sally forth
carrying lacrosse sticks. Many Indian players
still request to be buried with their sticks beside
them. The tradition of carved wooden lacrosse
sticks still flourishes as well. In the Tuscarora
Nation, near Sanborn, New York, Tuskewe Krafts,
a firm owned by John Wesley Patterson, Jr., turns
out 10,000 sticks a year at prices running from
$60 to $90.
For many Indians in ancient days, and today as
well, a lacrosse game was a ceremonial replay
of the Creation story, and of the struggle between
good and evil that followed it. The game could
also be worldly practical--mock war used for diplomatic
purposes or as a prudent step back from the threat
of war. The story, retold by Vennum, of two lacrosse
games played almost exactly 200 years ago between
the Mohawk and the Seneca seems to offer a case
in point.
Both belonged to the powerful league of Six Nations,
the Iroquois confederacy that also included the
Onondaga, Cayuga, Oneida and Tuscarora. The year
was 1794. After the French and Indian Wars and
the American Revolution, whites were again threatening
Indian holdings in what is now Ohio and western
New York. Chief Joseph Brant (Thayendanegea, in
Mohawk), a powerful chief who had sided with the
British during the Revolution, was negotiating
with them for land in Canada, but the site offered
was unacceptable. The Seneca agreed; if they took
it the Mohawk would be isolated from the rest
of the Six Nations. When Seneca intervention resulted
in a better site for the Mohawk, Brant set up
a ceremonial lacrosse match in part, Vennum speculates,
to celebrate the Seneca help.
There was also bad blood between Brant and Red
Jacket, an influential Seneca chief, going back
to a time when Brant had called him a "cow
killer," because it was said Red Jacket sent
Seneca warriors off to battle while he stayed
at home butchering their cows for himself. The
match may have represented a fence-mending effort
on Brant's part. If so, it apparently hit a snag.
During the game, according to a report written
at the time and cited in a biography of Brant
published in 1838, a Mohawk lost his temper and
"struck a sharp blow" to his opponent
with his stick. All action stopped, the story
goes; the Seneca team walked off the field. The
Mohawk and the Seneca did not play each other
again until 1797. But they kept on playing, and
so did the other Iroquois nations. Lacrosse, in
fact, was one of the things that helped hold the
Six Nations together through the difficult years
that followed.
In 1990 the Iroquois Nationals, an all-Iroquois
lacrosse team, traveled to Australia for the world
championship under their own flag and carrying
Iroquois passports. "We stood tall,"
says Rick Hill. "For a few moments the lacrosse-playing
nations (England, Japan, Australia, the Czech
Republic, the United States, Canada, Wales, Scotland,
Sweden, Germany) saluted our national flag. It
was quite a change after 200 years." 
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