We've all heard the old adage that every snowflake is different, but they do have one thing in common: They're all white. That's also the image that many have of the people taking part in winter sports, including skiing and snowboarding, here in the U.S.
There are efforts underway to change that. Every other year, the National Brotherhood of Skiers — or NBS — organizes an event known as the Black Summit or Black Ski Summit. It brings thousands of African-Americans to the slopes in big-name resort towns like Big Sky, Mont.; Lake Tahoe, Calif.; and, of course, Aspen, Colo.
Aspen/Snowmass plays host again to the 2015 summit and it's something of a homecoming for the NBS. The first ever summit — or "gathering," as it was called back then — took place here in 1973. That year, Art Clay of Chicago and Ben Finley of Los Angeles brought together 13 black ski clubs from around the country to spend a week on the slopes.
It happened during the tail end of the Black Power movement, and the founders knew that the appearance of hundreds of African-American skiers in Aspen might put the locals on edge. Clay recalls trying to come up with a name for their group that wouldn't draw the wrong kind of attention as they headed to Aspen.
"We didn't want to call ourselves the Black Ski Club," he says. "It was right after civil rights and we didn't want to ID ourselves before we got there."
Finley and Clay found out later that the National Guard had been placed on high alert, just in case. Regardless, Finley remembers that event as "absolutely magical."
"We had people from all over the country," he says. "It was a like an instant brotherhood. It was a feeling you can only duplicate at Black Summit."
More than 40 years later, Aspen now welcomes the National Brotherhood of Skiers with open arms — in no small part because the group spends a fair amount of tourist dollars. (Legend has it they bought every mink coat in Vail, Colo., at a summit in 1997).
They're also a fun bunch to have around. At the summit's opening ceremonies this year, bass booms from giant speakers as hundreds of black skiers gather to dance — they do the wobble and the cha-cha slide — and catch up.
Most wear brightly colored jackets representing their local clubs: Avalanche Ski Club from Alabama, Black Ski Club from Washington, D.C., All Seasons Ski Club out of Oakland and the Sunshine Slopers from Miami. More than 50 regional clubs, including Nubian Ski from London, are represented.
Art Clay and Ben Finley move through the crowd, greeting old friends. They've come to nearly every summit since they organized that first one 42 years ago. Finley's arm is in a sling — an accident at Mammoth Mountain in California will keep the 76-year-old off skis at this year's event.
At 78, Clay will take a few runs, sporting his traditional black bowler hat and long black duster. A hip replacement means no "black diamonds" — the advanced slopes — but nothing can stop him from having a good time on the easier green and blue routes, he says.
It's not just about skiing and parties for the NBS. After the first gathering in Aspen, the group's leaders decided it should be more than a social event. So they adopted two central missions: to introduce African-Americans to winter sports and find and fund talented young black athletes with the potential to make it all the way to the U.S. Olympic Ski Team.
They're still working on that second goal, but they've done admirably when it comes to getting more black folks out on skis and snowboards. Among them is 42 year-old Henry Hipps, who went to his first Black Summit in high school. He hasn't missed one since 1999 and he has skied all over the world.
"You're breathing hard, but it's quiet, and you could be in the middle of the woods skiing and stop and not hear anything," he says. "Ten feet later, keep going and feel like your heart's about to explode out of your chest. I love that balance between intensity and serenity. Add that to skiing and riding with people I like spending time with — it's like nothing else."
Hipps' parents started a club in Springfield, Mass., to introduce more black youth to the sport, and they were registered members of the NBS for most of his childhood. He points out that the black ski clubs and the NBS were crucial back then, because they were the only way to find other African-Americans who liked to ski.
But as an adult, he comes to the Black Summit without a ski club affiliation or NBS registration. He keeps in touch with cool people he's met at past summits through social media and email.
More and more black skiers and boarders are doing the same, partly because they don't want to have to pay the NBS registration fees for the event. Many think it's just too expensive. Early-bird registration starts at $250, which gets attendees into various happy hours and parties the NBS organizes throughout the week, and increases to $400 the week of the summit.
This year there are just as many unregistered black skiers in Aspen as there are registered for the Black Summit. Known as renegades, this younger crowd parties to hip-hop, not just the funk and soul of their parents' generation. They organize their own social events throughout the week rather than attending those for registered NBS members, and NBS leadership has mixed feelings about it.
Founder Art Clay says it's not fair that the renegades wait until the NBS makes its Black Summit plans before making theirs.
"I've never been in favor of somebody just tagging on," he says.
The NBS is an all-volunteer organization, and the Black Summit takes more than a year to put together. On top of that, the group is losing registration dollars that go to fund youth athletes. But the renegades we spoke with said the NBS is out of touch and unwilling to let the next generation of black skiers and boarders be leaders.
Clay recognizes that the organization is aging, and that's why he wants to push the renegades to register.
"Back when we started, if you would say, 'Who all wants to go to Snowmass, hold up your hand,' everybody would put up their hand," he says. "Now you have to say, 'Everybody who wants to go to Snowmass, hold up your cane.' "
Still, co-founder Ben Finley says he's not worried about the future of the NBS or the Black Summit, despite the renegades.
"They bring a lot of people," he says. "That means a lot more African-Americans are being exposed to the sport of skiing — and eventually they'll become gray too, and end up joining the organization."
Transcript
SCOTT SIMON, HOST:
This week a couple thousand African-American skiers met up in Aspen, Colo., for some winter fun and a cause. The gathering is known as the Black Summit, and it ends today. We sent NPR's Shereen Marisol Meraji from our Code Switch team to check it out.
SHEREEN MARISOL MERAJI, BYLINE: We all know the old adage every snowflake is different, except for one thing - they're all white. And so are a majority of the folks who take part in winter sports like skiing and snowboarding. But every other year this country's largest gathering of black skiers and boarders brings much needed color to the slopes.
DIANA STARKS: Greetings my NBS family.
(CHEERING)
UNIDENTIFIED MAN: Give it up, make some noise out there.
MERAJI: The NBS - the National Brotherhood of Skiers - puts on the Black Summit. And at this year's opening ceremony - held in Snowmass Village Plaza - President Diana Starks addresses a mass of black skiers decked out in their colorful, regional club gear.
STARKS: Isn't it great to be back where it all began 42 years ago? It's great.
MERAJI: Represented are the Avalanche Ski Club from Alabam; Black Ski from D.C.; All Seasons Ski Club out of Oakland, Calif.; the Sunshine Slopers from Miami, Fla., and so, so many more - more than 50 regional clubs united under one organization.
ART CLAY: The National Brotherhood of Skiers - brotherhood meaning the brothers and the sisters from the hood.
MERAJI: That's NBS founder Art Clay from Chicago. He's 78 and still skiing after a hip replacement, so no more black diamonds.
CLAY: I'm on the greens and the blues, you know (laughter)?
MERAJI: And co-founder Ben Finley, from Los Angeles, Calif., still skis regularly, too.
BEN FINLEY: Ten to two and only blue, at 76 years old, I can do that (laughter).
MERAJI: Both have come to nearly every Black Summit since they organized the first one here in Aspen 42 years ago.
FINLEY: In 1973, if you recall, it was the end of the black power movement. We had no idea how it was going to be accepted in Aspen. So we just individually went in and booked hotel rooms. And we ended up with 350 people.
MERAJI: Finley says they found out later that the National Guard was on high alert.
FINLEY: But we had a great time.
MERAJI: After that first gathering, they decided the National Brotherhood of Skiers needed to be more than a social club. It should have a mission - find and fund talented black youth athletes with the potential to make it all the way to the U.S. Olympic ski team, and get more African-Americans out on the slopes.
HENRY HIPPS: Man, there are some good powder runs today, dude.
MERAJI: Forty-two-year-old Henry Hipps went to his first Black Summit in high school and hasn't missed one since 1999. He's skied in Argentina, Switzerland, Canada and Japan and is passionate about the sport.
HIPPS: You're breathing hard, but it's quiet and you can be in the middle of the woods skiing and stop and not hear anything. Ten feet later, keep going and feel like your heart's about to explode out of your chest. I love that balance between intensity and serenity. Add that to skiing and riding with people that I like spending time with - it's like nothing else.
Whoa (laughter) that wasn't a bad first run, man.
MERAJI: Hipps's parents started a club in Springfield, Mass., to introduce more black kids to skiing and boarding, and they were registered members of the NBS for most of his youth.
HIPPS: Back in the day, those black ski clubs that were part of the National Brotherhood of Skiers network were so crucial because it was the only way to find folks of color who like to ski and ride.
MERAJI: But now as an adult, he comes to the summits without a black ski club affiliation and without registering with the NBS. Hipps keeps in touch with cool people he's met at past summits through Facebook and email.
HIPPS: Ah, another good run, yes sir.
MERAJI: You'll find just as many unregistered black skiers at the summit as registered with the NBS. They're called renegades, and they party to hip-hop and top 40 rather than the funk and soul of their parents' generation.
(SOUNDBITE OF SONG, "GROOVE ME")
KING FLOYD: (Singing) Hey, there sugar dumpling, come on, give me something. Girl, I been needing for days.
MERAJI: This week during the opening ceremony, the grayer NBS members did the Electric Slide in the snow to King Floyd's 1971 hit "Groove Me," while the younger renegades drank beer and bobbed their heads to Big Sean at a happy hour they organized. Founder Art Clay has mixed feelings about their presence.
CLAY: You know, it's best not to ask me about the renegades. I've never been in favor of somebody just tagging on.
MERAJI: Clay says it's not fair that the renegades wait until the NBS makes its Black Summit plans to make theirs. And on top of that, they're not paying registration fees that go to fund the youth athletes. But co-founder Ben Finley says he's not worried.
FINLEY: They bring a lot of people. That means a lot more African-Americans are being exposed to the sport of skiing. And eventually they'll become gray, too, and they'll end up joining the organization.
MERAJI: And in case you were wondering, the National Brotherhood of Skiers is still working on its goal to get a black athlete on the U.S. Olympic ski team. Shereen Marisol Meraji, NPR News. Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.
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