Current:Home > MarketsAlaska’s Indigenous teens emulate ancestors’ Arctic survival skills at the Native Youth Olympics -AssetTrainer
Alaska’s Indigenous teens emulate ancestors’ Arctic survival skills at the Native Youth Olympics
View
Date:2025-04-24 21:51:24
ANCHORAGE, Alaska (AP) — The athletes filling a huge gym in Anchorage, Alaska were ready to compete, cheering and stomping and high-fiving each other as they lined up for the chance to claim the state’s top prize in their events.
But these teenagers were at the Native Youth Olympics, a statewide competition that attracts hundreds of Alaska Native athletes each year and pays tribute to the skills and techniques used by their ancestors to survive in the harsh polar climate.
Events at the competition that wraps up Saturday include a stick pull, meant to mimic holding onto a slippery seal as it fights to return to the water, and a modified, four-step broad jump that approximates leaping across ice floes on the frozen ocean.
For generations, Alaska Natives played these games to develop the skills they needed to become successful hunters — and survive — in an unforgiving climate.
Now, today’s youth play “to help preserve our culture, our heritage, and to teach our youth how difficult life used to be and to share our culture with everyone around us who wants to know more about our people,” said Nicole Johnson, the head official for the event and one of Alaska’s most decorated Native athletes.
Johnson herself has won over 100 medals at Native Olympic competitions and for 29 years held the world record in the two-foot high kick, an event where athletes jump with both feet, kick a ball while keeping both feet even, and then land on both feet. Her record of 6-feet, 6-inches was broken in 2014.
For the “seal hop,” a popular event on Saturday, athletes get into a push-up or plank position and shuffle across the floor on their knuckles — the same stealthy crawl their ancestors used during a hunt to sneak up on unsuspecting seals napping on the ice.
“And when they got close enough to the seal, they would grab their harpoon and get the seal,” said Johnson, an Inupiaq originally from Nome.
Colton Paul had the crowd clapping and stomping their feet. Last year, he set a world record in the scissors broad jump with a mark of 38 feet, 7 inches when competing for Mount Edgecumbe High School, a boarding school in Sitka. The jump requires power and balance, and includes four specific stylized leaps that mimic hop-scotching across floating ice chunks to navigate a frozen river or ocean.
The Yupik athlete from the western Alaska village of Kipnuk can no longer compete because he’s graduated, but he performed for the crowd on Friday, and jumped 38 feet, 9 inches.
He said Native Youth Olympics is the only sport for which he’s had a passion.
“Doing the sports has really made me had a sense of ‘My ancestors did this’ and I’m doing what they did for survival,” said Paul, who is now 19. “It’s just something fun to do.”
Awaluk Nichols has been taking part in Native Youth Olympics for most of her childhood. The events give her a chance to explore her Inupiaq heritage, something she feels is slowing fading away from Nome, a Bering Sea coastal community.
“It helps me a lot to just connect with my friends and my culture, and it just means a lot to me that we still have it,” said the high school junior, who listed her best event as the one-foot high kick.
Some events are as much of a mental test as a physical one. In one competition called the “wrist carry,” two teammates hold a stick at each end, while a third person hangs from the dowel by their wrist, legs curled up like a sloth, as their teammates run around an oval track.
The goal is to see who can hang onto the stick the longest without falling or touching the ground. The event builds strength, endurance and teamwork, and emulates the traits people of the north needed when they lived a nomadic lifestyle and had to carry heavy loads, organizers said.
Nichols said her family and some others still participate in some Native traditions, like hunting and subsisting off the land like their ancestors, but competing in the youth games “makes you feel really connected with them,” she said.
“Just knowing that I’m part of what used to be — it makes me happy,” she said.
veryGood! (479)
Related
- IRS recovers $4.7 billion in back taxes and braces for cuts with Trump and GOP in power
- A non-traditional candidate resonates with Taiwan’s youth ahead of Saturday’s presidential election
- President Joe Biden’s record age, 81, is an ‘asset,’ first lady Jill Biden says
- Isabella Strahan Receives Support From Twin Sister Sophia Amid Brain Cancer Diagnosis
- McConnell absent from Senate on Thursday as he recovers from fall in Capitol
- Trump speaks at closing arguments in New York fraud trial, disregarding limits
- Lake Powell Is Still in Trouble. Here’s What’s Good and What’s Alarming About the Current Water Level
- Nick Saban could have won at highest level many more years. We'll never see his kind again
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- $100M will be left for Native Hawaiian causes from the estate of an heiress considered last princess
Ranking
- The Louvre will be renovated and the 'Mona Lisa' will have her own room
- Google lays off hundreds in hardware, voice assistant teams amid cost-cutting drive
- Fantasia Barrino on her emotional journey back to 'Color Purple': 'I'm not the same woman'
- Taxes after divorce can get . . . messy. Here are seven tax tips for the newly unmarried
- Megan Fox's ex Brian Austin Green tells Machine Gun Kelly to 'grow up'
- Ohio House overrides governor Mike DeWine's veto of gender-affirming care ban
- In his 1st interview, friend who warned officials of Maine shooter says ‘I literally spelled it out’
- As car insurance continues to rise, U.S. inflation ticks up in December
Recommendation
'As foretold in the prophecy': Elon Musk and internet react as Tesla stock hits $420 all
What is Hezbollah and what does Lebanon have to do with the Israel-Hamas war?
A British postal scandal ruined hundreds of lives. The government plans to try to right those wrongs
Modi’s beach visit to a remote Indian archipelago rakes up a storm in the Maldives
Sarah J. Maas books explained: How to read 'ACOTAR,' 'Throne of Glass' in order.
Pat McAfee says Aaron Rodgers is no longer appearing on his show
Food Network star Darnell Ferguson arrested, pleads not guilty to burglary, strangulation
In his 1st interview, friend who warned officials of Maine shooter says ‘I literally spelled it out’