Sports and Entertainment10/8/2024 5:00 PM
Naim Cardinal, Indigenous hockey card collector, will provide a presentation about Indigenous influences in the game of hockey shown through the lens of hockey cards. Naim has been researching and studying Indigenous hockey history for almost a decade and has become a passion for him.
The Indigenous Influences in Hockey presentation will discuss a number of Indigenous hockey players who have made it to the highest levels of hockey—the NHL—and will celebrate their careers and impacts on the game of hockey.
Additionally, Naim will have his hockey card collection available for viewing which consists of every Indigenous player who has played in the NHL and has a hockey card made.
Presenter: Naim Cardinal is nehiyaw (Cree) and a proud member of Tallcree Tribal Government (First Nation) located in Treaty 8 territory of Alberta. Naim grew up in Fort Vermilion, AB. which is approximately 650km north of Edmonton; however, he is currently living as a guest in the traditional, ancestral, and unceded territory of the syilx (Okanagan) Peoples in Kelowna, BC. He is a husband to his wife, Melanie, who is Secwepemc, and the father of three children Amelia, Augustine, and Alden. Naim is a former high school teacher who currently works at UBC Okanagan as an Educational Facilitator and works to educate students, staff, and faculty about Truth and Reconciliation as well as Indigenous culture, history, and perspectives.
Naim has been collecting hockey cards for 25 years as he started as an 8-year-old in 1989 but took a break from 1994 until 2004. After a decade of being back in collecting hockey cards, in 2014, he decided to focus his energy into putting together a collection of one rookie card of every player of Indigenous (First Nations, Metis, and Inuit) descent. Since then, his collection has been dedicated to documenting and sharing the accomplishments, histories, experiences, and ancestry of each player via his website. His hockey card collection has opened the doors for many opportunities to educate others and to create a special set of Indigenous hockey cards with Upper Deck called the First Peoples Rookie Cards. Naim also views his collection as a way of connecting to the community and inspiring Indigenous youth by sharing the stories of the Indigenous hockey players who have found success inside and out of the game of hockey