The Ways
Lady Thunderhawks
Special | 3m 22sVideo has Closed Captions
Jessica House of the Oneida Nation leads the high school basketball team by example.
The Lady Thunderhawks varsity basketball team is a source of pride for the Oneida Nation. Learn how Jessica House, a captain of the team, infuses cultural heritage and discipline in her leadership role.
The Ways
Lady Thunderhawks
Special | 3m 22sVideo has Closed Captions
The Lady Thunderhawks varsity basketball team is a source of pride for the Oneida Nation. Learn how Jessica House, a captain of the team, infuses cultural heritage and discipline in her leadership role.
How to Watch The Ways
The Ways is available to stream on pbs.org and the free PBS App, available on iPhone, Apple TV, Android TV, Android smartphones, Amazon Fire TV, Amazon Fire Tablet, Roku, Samsung Smart TV, and Vizio.
[drumming] - Jessica House: I started playing ball when I was eight years old.
I just had a really good passion to play basketball for Oneida Nation.
Basketball is my life, and so is the culture.
My name is Jessica House.
I am a senior, and I play for the Lady Thunderhawks.
To be a Lady Thunderhawk, you have to learn discipline.
I mean, you're role models.
You've got to think about how you're acting out in public.
[singing and drumming] In order to play basketball at Oneida, you have to be in the culture.
You have to participate.
Not a lot of girls were raised into it, where I was.
But they are starting to find their ways now.
Some of them even come to Long House now.
[singing and drumming] It's important because I think it helps know who they really are.
Sometimes you get so caught up in the other world.
There's other girls, like me and Tasha, we take separate classes out of school for an actual language class.
Our teacher, Shalihókt, when he was younger, there was more of the elders around that spoke the language, whereas now we don't really hear it.
- [speaking Oneida] Have you learned, have you learned it?
- Shalihókt teaches us words to say.
Every time we go for a huddle, we go: - [speaking Oneida] Whoo!
["Native Puppy Love" by A Tribe Called Red] [all cheering] Yay!
- We have 11 girls on this Lady T-hawk team.
I am captain.
I'm also the point guard, so I'm expected to keep the game going, keep everyone under control.
Keep myself under control!
Before, we had hardly any people in the stands.
My sophomore year, the fans started to fill in.
My parents only missed one game out of the three years I've been at Oneida.
I think it's really cool when all the parents are there supporting their daughters.
It gives us our energy.
I don't know how the other girls see it, but there's no better feeling than when you play basketball.