Basketball offers bright future for First Nations youth in B.C.
Basketball tournament brings hundreds of First Nations players together in Vancouver
For most people basketball is just a sport, but for many of the First Nations youth at the Native Basketball Festival last weekend, in Burnaby, B,C., basketball is a brighter option than some of the choices they might face in their home communities.
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"There's only like two choices. There's either drugs or alcohol, which is like that for a lot of people," said Jayson Wing.
"But I chose basketball. And it brought me here and it's keeping me clean."
"I was taken away from my parents at a young age ... just because.. of their drinking," said Anna Atilo, a basketball player from Ahousaht First Nation.
"Basketball is such a big part of communities ... and if I didn't have it ... I'd probably be doing a lot of the same things. Drinking and drugging."
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Simon Fraser University, in Vancouver, hosted the Native Basketball Festival. Only in its second year, it brought in teams from Washington State, Alberta, and B.C. — 32 teams and as many as 300 players, from oldtimers to a whole new generation.
"Where we live, it's our all sport. We play all the time [in] Ahousaht!" said nine-year-old Maikeli Kalocoukovale.
With files from CBC reporter Kamil Karamali.