Come Play where Lacrosse Originated
Deyhontsigwa’ehs: The Creator’s Game,
Lacrosse Weekend 2019
Saturday September 28-Sunday September 29, 2019
Onondaga Lake Park, Liverpool, New York
in the heart of Onondaga Nation Territory
4th Haudenosaunee Wooden Stick Festival
The festival features wooden lacrosse stick makers and other Haudenosaunee crafters. The festival takes place on the sports fields on the south of Onondaga Lake Park. There will be traditional singing and dancing with traditional Haudenosaunee foods and speakers. This event will be educational and entertaining for the whole family.
There are three exciting events taking place at the same time:
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Wooden Stick Festival (9:00am-5:00pm)
Social Dancing Noon Saturday and Sunday
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- Wooden lacrosse stick artisans,
- Alf Jacques will have a booth showcasing his collection and how to make wooden sticks. He will be doing presentations throughout the day.
- Travis Gabriel and Tionatakwente Lacrosse will be selling lacrosse sticks at the event.
- traditional Haudenosaunee crafters
- Haudenosaunee dancing
- Haudenosaunee speakers
- Free and fun for the whole family
- Wooden lacrosse stick artisans,
-
Rand Hall Masters Wood Stick Lacrosse Tournament (9:00am-4:00pm)
- Free to watch
- registration fee to play (to cover refs and rentals)
-
Spirit Twins Box Lacrosse Clinic (Noon on Saturday)
- Noon on Saturday
- Box clinic for 9-13 year olds.
- spirittwinslacrosse.com
The Haudenosaunee (Called “Iroquois” by colonists) are the originators and keepers of the game known today as “lacrosse.” Deyhontsigwa’ehs (“They Bump Hips,” in the Onondaga Language) goes back millennia and is also known as “The Creator’s Game” and the “Medicine Game” The Onondaga Nation is the “Central Fire” of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy of six nations (Mohawk, Onondaga, Oneida, Cayuga, Seneca, and Tuscarora). The Haudenosaunee Confederacy was founded on the shore of Onondaga Lake––now called Syracuse, NY. Over 1000 years ago. Deyhontsigwa’ehs played an integral role in establishing “The Great Law of Peace.” Today throughout Haudenosaunee territory the “Medicine Game” is still played in ceremony. We are dedicated to re-establishing a Haudenosaunee presence back at Onondaga Lake where this game was originally played.
Our Collaborative Spirit.
The Haudenosaunee Wooden Stick Festival is a collaboration between the American Indian Law Alliance and the Indigenous Values Initiative. We are proud to collaborate with one another on such an important event. One of the many lessons we can all learn from Deyhontsigwa’ehs (lacrosse) is the importance of collaboration and working together.
Our Sponsors
Special thanks to our Sponsors:
Second Annual Randy Hall Masters
Wooden Stick Lacrosse Tournament
There will be referees, a tent for changing, a box sized field marked out on the grass with 4×4 nets by Onondaga Lake. Players will be responsible for helmets and gloves, and wooden sticks. Teams will be responsible for their jerseys. Wooden sticks are preferred but not required.
- Prizes
- First Prize: Leather Game Ball, trophy, $700 cash
- Second Prize: Plaque, and $300 cash.
- Third Prize: Plaque and $300 cash.
- The tournament registration fee:
- $300 Early Bird registration per team until 3/31/2019
- $400 Regular registration per team until 8/31/19
- $500 Walk-up per team until 9/28/19
- Individual registration for house team(s) (includes jersey and lunch)
- Early Bird registration $75 per person until 3/31/2019
- Regular registration $100 per person until 8/31/2019
- Walk-up registration $125 per person until 9/28/2019
Get Involved
About Randy Hall
Thomas Randall “Randy” Hall, Akwesasne Mohawk Wolf Clan, passed away January 18, 2018. He served in Vietnam with US Army (1965-68) and participated in the 1972 AIM take-over of the Bureau of Indian Affairs in Washington D.C. He loved sports and was deeply involved with the Onondaga Athletic Club where he played and coached lacrosse and basketball. One of his favorite things to do was to travel and play in tournaments. In his memory, the Haudenosaunee Wooden Stick Festival honors Randy by naming the wooden sticks tournament after him.
The inaugural Haudenosaunee Wooden Stick Festival was held at Onondaga Lake in 2013. Previously the game had been played exclusively on Haudenosaunee Nation territories, but in 2013, Randy Hall asked Philip P. Arnold and Sandy Bigtree for help in bringing the game back to Onondaga Lake––its place of origin. It was here the Peacemaker arrived well over 1,000 years ago to bring peace to five warring nations. Few realize that Deyhontsigwa’ehs, the Creator’s Game, was an integral part of this peacemaking process. This ancient game is still played ceremonially among the Haudenosaunee. It is played hard, but always played to foster good relationships between human beings and the natural world.
Hotels
Registration link Hotel Information
Group Name: | Wooden Stick Festival-Indigenous |
Group Code: | WSF |
Check-in: | 28-SEP-2019 |
Check-out: | 29-SEP-2019 |
Hotel Name: | Hampton Inn Syracuse Clay |
Hotel Address: | 3948 State Route 31 |
Liverpool, New York | |
13090 | |
Phone Number: | 315-443-3861 |
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