
Meagan Big Snake ’11
will represent the Laker women’s ice hockey team, her college, her culture, her
country and the Olympic spirit when she accompanies the world’s most famous
flame across Canada
this winter.
Big Snake, a defender and co-captain for the Lakers, will
serve as one of 11 youth flame attendants guarding and running with the Olympic
torch on its cross-country trek. She was one of six Aboriginal Canadians selected.
While back home in Siksika,
Alberta, this summer, Big Snake
saw big posters appear looking for nominees to run 300-meter stretches with the
torch. She asked her parents if she could apply, but they pretended to dissuade
her because her maternal grandmother Ellen Black already was submitting a
nomination on her behalf.
“My grandma received input from my parents, my two younger
sisters, my family and the community” in crafting the nomination, Big Snake
said.
The letter so impressed officials that they sent it higher
and, instead of becoming one of 12,000 torchbearers, Big Snake will join the
small team accompanying the longest relay race to take place in any country.
The 106-day relay is presented by Coca-Cola and RBC and supported by the
government of Canada.
Big Snake will fly to London,
Ontario, the day after Christmas to join the
torch relay as a guide and protector through its arrival in Vancouver for opening ceremonies on Feb. 12.
First Nation representation
The Vancouver Organizing Committee is emphasizing First
Nation, Inuit and Metis representation in celebrating the 2010 games in Vancouver. Big Snake is a
member of the Siksika Nation, which is part of the Blackfoot Confederacy.
“To be nominated by your own communities and peers is a
great honor,” said Andrea Shaw, VANOC’s vice president of sponsorship sales and
marketing. “These Aboriginal men and women symbolize the best in all of us.”
The involvement of First Nation representatives “shows the
importance of the flame to the Aboriginals is so strong, and is similar to the
Olympic spirit and the actual flame which signifies hope, peace and
friendship,” Big Snake said.
The once-in-a-lifetime opportunity means Big Snake will miss
more than half the season for the Laker women’s ice hockey team, which last year made the playoffs
in the rugged ECAC West conference in just the program’s third season.
The 20-year-old daughter of Curtis and Maria Big Snake was
elected co-captain this year. A regular blue line contributor, she said her
teammates’ support for this endeavor has been “so awesome.”
Big Snake, who became really interested in women’s hockey
after the Canadian team won gold in the 2002 Olympics, knows this
responsibility will cause her to miss nearly three weeks of classes in the
spring semester but promised to do everything she can to work with her
professors to make things as smooth as possible.
Guarding the flame
Attendants like Big Snake will
guard and accompany the flame around the clock as it makes its
45,000-kilometer journey using modes of transport that will include seaplane,
dogsled, Haida canoe, zipline and tall ship.
She will be part of the “envelope” around the runner with
the flame, along with a security detail that includes the Royal Canadian
Mounted Police, Big Snake said. “We encourage them along the way and let them
know it’s their moment,” she said of the torchbearers.
At least one of those torchbearers will have a SUNY Oswego
connection as well. John Egan '86 will carry
the flame during day 100 from Whistler to Merritt, B.C. He sent his regards to
Big Snake after seeing a story about her as the lead article on
Vancouver2010.com.
A public justice major on the SUNY Oswego Deans’ List, Big
Snake realizes the importance of her role and all that she represents.
“This is so exciting because not only am I
representing myself and my achievements, but my parents and my family who
supported me, my community, the Aboriginals of my country and all over the
whole world and especially Oswego
State and the Lakers,”
Big Snake said.
-- Tim Nekritz M '05
PHOTO CAPTION:
Meagan Big Snake '11
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Email: alumni@oswego.edu
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