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JOIN US:  Native American Children Need YOU!

Sat Mar 22, 2008 at 06:12:13 PM PDT

JOIN US:  Native American Children Need YOU!

Changing Winds Advocacy Center is an educational, Civil Rights, and charitable organization working with several different Native American Nations in South Dakota.  We have many programs that you can easily participate in to strengthen the efforts of self-sufficiency of the tribes, support traditional cultural programs, and will serve the youth of the reservations through the building of a library.  

Rather than struggling against an immovable oppressor, Changing Winds Inc at www.changingwinds.org  has begun to assist the strengthening of the tribes from within.  There is a lot to be done and a lot you can do. Read the entire Blog entry to find out more about our organization and programs, why the need is so great, and how you can actively participate to make things better.

There was a recent post by a member of this blog who invited us to post information about Changing Winds Advocacy Center. We are an educational, Civil Rights, and charitable organization working with several different Native American Nations in South Dakota.  People are always curious about how they can actively participate in making the world a better place.  Changing Winds has programs that you can easily be involved in that will strengthen the efforts of self-sufficiency of the tribes, support traditional cultural programs, and will serve the youth of the reservations through the building of a library.  

Changing Winds Advocacy Center started in 2001 under the name of Students and Teachers Against Racism (STAR).  The original intention was to assist activists who were trying to remove racist American Indian team names, such as the Redskins, which is akin to the N word for African-Americans.  However, no sooner were we underway than the egregious treatment of Native American children in education was brought to our attention.  Within the first two years, we received complaints that ranged from the whipping of a Native boy by a group of white children on a playground, padded cells used for time-outs, a Native child thrown into garbage can by white children who told him “he could not come out until he stunk like an Indian”  and many more, equally unbelievable situations.  Two weeks after civil rights complaints were filed against a school district for never interfering with racist behavior of children and for unethical treatment of the Native children by the staff, a Native boy was found hanging from the school swing set.  The children were allowed to enter the school even as the boy hung there.  We were never able to bring attention to the situation in anything other than Native journals.  Visit our website Archives to see reports, articles, and evidence of what is happening to Native people even today.  http://www.racismagainstindians.org

The list of complaints are endless.  As STAR evolved into Changing Winds, we began to investigate other forms of injustice in South Dakota, where much of our work has taken place.  Native people, and indeed, people in poverty everywhere, go to prison for the crime of not being able to afford an attorney.  However, in SD, at least two federal agents have been caught falsifying charges against Native men.  One such case was recently publicized in the Argus Leader, a daily newspaper in South Dakota.  We investigated another federal agent last spring and found evidence of the same on the Rosebud Reservation.   We were able to refer the case to the Department of Justice who took action against the offending federal officer.

There is an urgently important movement starting in South Dakota, one which impacts the future of tribes there.  In past years, state social workers have ignored the Indian Child Welfare Act which states that all children fall under tribal jurisdiction and belong not only to their family but to their tribe.  It is actually illegal for social workers to remove Native children and place them in non-native homes without the approval of the tribes.  

South Dakota state social services has been like a demon that feeds on children.  In order to maintain their jobs, they must place children in other families homes.  They receive thousands of dollars for placing a child with another family, and they even get thousands more for Native American children.  Therefore, it is no surprise that certain reservations, such as Pine Ridge, lost up to and sometimes more than 1000 children per year to the state!  The ICWA law has been ignored, children have not only been placed outside of the tribe, illegally with non-native families, but also placed in other states making it almost impossible for family visitations or recovering the children.  Every reservation in  South Dakota is doing battle to hold onto their children and some have established new codes whereupon the state MAY NOT remove the children from the tribe.  Without the children where is the future?

By providing for the families who are in the most dire need of clothing, food and furnishings, we are able to assist those who are most risk of losing their children to the state solely due to poverty.

The needs are tremendous, but not insurmountable. In most of the country, adolescent suicide ranks as the eighth leading cause of death.  On the reservations in SD, it is the LEADING cause of death.  In a recent suicide intervention program on Rosebud the children were asked why they thought this might be. They answered that there was nothing to do.

There are no malls, no movie theatres, no shops or downtown areas for them to meet.  Gas is expensive and travel from town to town may be a forty-five minute drive. There are dry dusty streets, long cold winters, virtually no sources of after school entertainment or even jobs.  Alcoholism is rampant, as are all of the other expected social ills that accompany extreme poverty and hopelessness.

The rates of poverty on some of the reservations in South Dakota is at least 52.3%, and most believe it is closer to 70%.  Unemployment on some of SD’s reservations is about 80%.  The Native high school drop out rate in Rapid City, SD is about 60%.  The average age of death for a Native American man in SD is about 50 years old.  However, we did our own study and followed the obituaries in Pine Ridge and found that it was closer to 42 years old.  Many in the obits, of course, were children.

Children need hope.  They need to feel there is a future that will be exciting, stimulating, rewarding, and relevant to their culture.  The lack of resources for children on the reservations are overwhelming.  Changing Winds has begun to address this on several reservations, but is focusing right now on The Boys and Girls Clubs of Rosebud which has been given an old bowling alley that needs a complete refurbishing.  We are looking for volunteers who will go out and lend their talents to rebuild, and also to teach skills that will enable the children to visualize a life that is relevant and sustaining.

Our programs have always been aimed at helping the children visualize a future where they can live a full life, free of the sting of racism.  This future must be one that allows them to maintain their cultural identities.  Reservation public schools  completely ignore the Native perspective of history, making the children feel they are in the wrong school.  They will learn about Columbus, but not Wounded Knee, even on their own land.  One of our many goals is to bring classes onto the reservation that will enable students to become web artists, authors, broadcast journalists, and any other position that they can do to earn an income from the land they live on.  

Changing Winds has always maintained that the most gratifying way for people to donate is to provide the requested materials themselves, rather than donate money.

This past winter, with promotional support from Tiokasin Ghost Horse of  WBAI radio, 99.5 fm in New York, we were able to provide children with warm clothing and/or coats to help the tribes prove to the state they CAN take care of their children.  In the last four years we have supplied warm clothing and/or coats for thousands of children. This year, we purchased 200 pairs of brand new shoes at wholesale prices, sewing machines, electric heaters, diapers and baby formula.  We are now providing books for the first public library on the Rosebud reservation, to be held within the Boys and Girls Clubs of Rosebud.  These books will specifically be by and about Native people, and particularly the Lakota people, who we predominantly serve.

When people provide materials, their hand touches the goods that are welcomed by the needy recipient.  However, we also take financial donations which are utilized approximately 93% towards goods and services, 7% towards administrative costs which are solely gas funds to deliver the goods,  and maintaining the website and promotional materials to get the word out.  Those are the extent of our costs, making donations benefit the children 100%.  The Changing Winds staff is all volunteer, no one gets a salary and no one personally benefits in any way.  If you are interested in strengthening and joining our efforts, please visit Warming Hearts on the Changing Winds website, at http://www.changingwinds.org or call 203-256-9720 for more information about the most recent request for tribal assistance.  You can also email us at CWAdvocacyCenter@aol.com or visit www.changingwinds.org to see all of the work that we do.  JOIN US!  Be a part of the circle!

Tags: American Indian, Native American, Child Advocacy, Indian Country, Civil Rights, charity, educational programs, donations, charitable programs, spirituality (all tags) :: Previous Tag Versions

Permalink | 13 comments

  •  Excellent post! Put up a tip jar. (8+ / 0-)

    To put the level of poverty some Native Americans live with every day, back in 1992, I was fortunate enough to take a class at Haskell Indian Junior College (it's a four year college now) in Lawrence, Kansas, and tuition was $40 for the semester, regardless of how many hours you took, and $40 for room and board in their dorms, so $80 total for an entire semester.  I met kids who's entire extended families and sometimes entire neighborhoods would help save up to help pay for one semester.  No one in this country should be that poor, no one.  Anything to help put an end to this atrocity is a good cause.

  •  Thank you Rose (6+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    empathy, Tanya, OHdog, GoracleFan, jlms qkw, redtex

    I like a little rebellion now and then. It is like a storm in the atmosphere ~ Thomas Jefferson

    by valadon on Sat Mar 22, 2008 at 06:24:34 PM PDT

  •  Having taught in a BIA school.. (4+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    empathy, bluebrain, jlms qkw, redtex

    I learned that changes cannot be imposed from without.  However, we should do EVERYTHING we can to provide our Native American sisters and brothers with the tools and finances to makes those changes for themselves.

    How did I live without him?

    by Pumpkinlove on Sat Mar 22, 2008 at 06:31:08 PM PDT

  •  Why don't we hear... (3+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    empathy, bluebrain, Tanya

    Thanks for bringing this to us. Keep bringing it to us.
    What is you infant mortality rate? I've heard that it is very high.

    McCain's daily Gaffe is a laugh a day.

    by redtex on Sat Mar 22, 2008 at 06:32:48 PM PDT

    •  Mortality Rate (0+ / 0-)

      The reasons for the high Native mortality rate in SD is varied and I cannot claim to know exactly why.  However, from observation, I would have to say that

      1. The Indian health Service medical facilities are as poorly run as everything else the BIA has its hands in. Outside doctors who come there to work are generally people who are willing to work in remote areas for low pay.  They are either siants and angels or they are the weakest links in the medical chain...and it is more often the latter than the former.
      1. Nutrition is poor.  Stores sell old produce left over from the chains at high prices.  Yes, companies really do exploit the poor.
      1. Minimal prenatal care.  Gas costs a fortune and everything on the reservations is remote.  To get from one town to another can be too costly.
      1.  Drugs and alcohol probably play a part to a certain percentage, though I don't what that percentage is.
      1. Water there is heavily contaminated by farm pesticides as well as high uranium content, made worse by mining.
      1. Some homes lack heat in the winter.

      Sadly, the list goes on and on.
      Christine

  •  this is a great cause (3+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    empathy, bluebrain, jlms qkw

    maybe some of you could start blogging here on a regulare basis about the ongoing issues. thank you for bringing this to our attention.

    To sin by silence when they should protest makes cowards of men~~ Abraham Lincoln

    by Tanya on Sat Mar 22, 2008 at 06:34:08 PM PDT

    •  Tanya (0+ / 0-)

      Thank you.  I am so happy there has been such a positive response to the posting.  It is so hard to get the word out about how bad things are there.  The media only covers Native issues from a negative point of view, high social problems, never highlighting how hard people are working from within to fix things.  There are good things happening, but support is needed.
      Thank you again.
      Christine

  •  Thanks for posting here (4+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    empathy, bluebrain, Tanya, jlms qkw

    I sent a couple of books off of your list.  Glad to help.  

    NetrootNews coming soon!

    by ksh01 on Sat Mar 22, 2008 at 06:35:26 PM PDT

  •  Native Americans (5+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    empathy, bluebrain, Tanya, jlms qkw, Katie71

    Americas first injustice,  probably our most lingering injustice (if one could compare injustices somehow)  Thank you for your post.  My husband and I have often supported groups that help our native peoples. We feel a special spiritual connection to the Native American Ways and beliefs....All could benefit from it.  I was especially pleased that Sen. Obama has oft mentioned the inequitable treatment of The Native Americans.
    May the winds of change bring us all peace.  Happy Spring everyone!

    "hold on to dreams for when dreams die life is a broken winged bird that cannot fly" e. dickinson

    by kansasgal on Sat Mar 22, 2008 at 06:36:24 PM PDT

  •  I'm going to see if... (3+ / 0-)

    Recommended by:
    empathy, bluebrain, jlms qkw

    I can find a way to volunteer to teach some classes! This is great!

    Thanks for getting out the word Rose!

    Ironically enough, I was partly raised by my aunt, who was an english teacher and her name; Rose. ;)

    "Change is the constant, the signal for rebirth, the egg of the phoenix."

    -Christina Baldwin

    by Erevann on Sat Mar 22, 2008 at 07:18:18 PM PDT

  •  Helping Native Children (0+ / 0-)

    Thank you for your comments.  It is so wonderful to find people who truly care about the well being of Native children.

    I would like to invite you to join WarmingHearts at
    groups.yahoo.com/group/warminghearts
    We only post about three times a year about emergency situations and always offer the opportunity for people to really help directly.
    Winter post: Warm clothing , coats and boots for kids
    One or two posts a year about a dire situation, or events like the library.

    Thank you all for your concern!!!
    Christine
    www.changingwinds.org

Permalink | 13 comments