This article was originally posted on MajorLeagueLacrosse.com. We are re-posting the story with the permission of the league.
While Boston Cannons midfielder Kyle Jackson wasn't fully emerged in his Native American background when he was first born, lacrosse has helped Jackson learn about his culture and the importance of the origins of the game.
"I'm a blonde-haired, blue-eyed Native American," Jackson said. "I also didn't really grow up in the typical reservation, like Six Nations, where lacrosse was at the forefront of everybody's mind. I'm the outlier in 99.9 percent of the cases, and it doesn't cause problems by any means, but it puts me in a very different avenue than a Randy Staats or a Lyle Thompson, who ultimately have grown up with the Native American roots behind them."
Jackson is Ojibwe from the Aamjiwnaang First Nation in Sarnia, Ontario. As his professional lacrosse career progressed, so did his integration with the Native American culture. This, Jackson said, is in part because of his time playing for the Iroquois Nationals, and in part because of his relationships with other Native American players in Major League Lacrosse (MLL) and the National Lacrosse League (NLL).
"I was at the forefront of really having to educate myself with what my background really entailed over the last couple of years," Jackson said.
Jackson welcomes those differences between his and others' integration with the culture, and his appreciation for the opportunity to play the Creator's Game is unwavering.
"It's amazing," Jackson said. "It almost seems to have this different, profound meaning behind it when you put on that jersey. Not that putting on a USA jersey or a Canada jersey isn't special, but the support that the Iroquois Nationals has from a family standpoint—anytime you travel, anytime you're playing in any location, there's always a group there supporting you and embracing you like family."