Posts Tagged ‘Native Americans in Philanthropy’

Powering Reciprocity and Investment in Native Communities

Tuesday, April 9th, 2013

By Shelley Means
Ojibwe/Oglala
Northwest Network Weaver
Native Americans in Philanthropy

The 8th annual Native Philanthropy Institute just ended in the lands of the Cherokee. We had quite a contingent from the Northwest – Native leaders and funders from every state in our region! And, along with several hundred others from around the nation, we lived up to the Institute’s theme of “Philanthropy Ignited.”  On the first day of the gathering, our  Northwest group of 16 even reached rapid-fire consensus on a vision for our region:

“Equal and long term vibrant rural and urban Native communities.”

Not bad, considering we had 10 minutes to compose our vision as a text message in 10 words or less!

Native Americans in Philanthropy’s (NAP) hard-working staff and volunteers brought us a whirlwind of new research, thoughtful dialog, networking opportunities and on our last evening, the very inspiring new film, “The Cherokee Word for Water.”

One critical piece of research that funders will find useful: Native Voices Rising: A Case for Funding Native-Led Change.  NAP Board Member Emeritus, Louis Delgado, led a team of researchers to assess Native-led nonprofits working in five specific interest areas. From the initial lists came case studies exploring the challenges, measures of success, and cross-cultural issues. A second research project of note surveys Native-led nonprofits in Minnesota while providing current data for funders (an excellent model and resource for funders in the Northwest states if similar research were conducted in our region). Both reports will be available on NAP’s website soon.

NAP has been exploring better ways to communicate with members and beyond, and we were treated to the debut of the new tagline, “Powering Reciprocity and Investment in Native Communities” as well as the newly re-vamped website, www.nativephilanthropy.org.

A final Northwest note:  The Tulalip Tribes Charitable Giving received NAP’S “Tribal Philanthropy” award for philanthropic giving grounded in traditional values. Sharon Thompson, executive director of the Arctic Slope Community Foundation, received NAP’s “Flying Eagle Woman” award for community-based philanthropy clearly guided by Indigenous thinking and philosophy, including a holistic, community-centered approach to living and giving. (Sharon is also on the 2013 Philanthropy Northwest Annual Conference planning committee).

Visit these websites for more information about the work of these NAP awardees:

Tulalip Tribes:  http://www.quilcedavillage.org/charitable_fund/index.asp

Arctic Slope Community Foundation: http://arcticslopecommunity.org/

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Next Week: Montana, Wyoming, Idaho Funders Discuss Public Policy, Native Issues

Friday, February 22nd, 2013

By Mandi Moshay
Communications Manager
Philanthropy Northwest

Funders in Montana, Wyoming, and Idaho, are invited to join Philanthropy Northwest for the next Montana-Wyoming-Idaho Funders Teleconference on Wednesday, February 27. Now in its fifth year, the goal of the teleconferences is to share information and build relationships that inspire change in Montana, Wyoming, and Idaho.

On the agenda for next week’s call:

  • Foundations on the Hill (FOTH) preview:  With issues like tax reform looming, there has never been a more important time for philanthropy to demonstrate the incredible impact it has. Hear from the Philanthropy Northwest delegation about how they will be representing us as they visit electeds next month in Washington D.C. What messages would you like them to carry on your behalf?
  • Native Americans in Philanthropy (NAP): Regional Action Network meetings serve as a bridge for shared learning between funders and Native communities. What have they been learning? What are some of the regional opportunities to build relationships, explore partnerships and collaborate for collective impact?

Thanks to the support of Philanthropy Northwest members, these teleconferences are currently open to all public and private funders in Montana, Wyoming, and Idaho as a way to build community and share information. Click here to learn more and register for this call.

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Philanthropy NW Receives Award from Native Americans in Philanthropy

Friday, May 11th, 2012

By Mandi Moshay
Communications Manager
Philanthropy Northwest

Native Americans in Philanthropy recently hosted their 2012 Native Philanthropy Institute, and as part of its annual award ceremony, recognized Philanthropy Northwest as Partner and Ally of the Year. The Partner and Ally Award was given for the first time this year, and is designed to recognize non-Native organizations that demonstrate a leadership role in partnering with Native organizations. CEO Carol Lewis was on hand at the Native Philanthropy Institute to accept the award.

Philanthropy Northwest was nominated by Tommer Peterson of Grantmakers in the Arts. “Philanthropy Northwest seemed like a natural fit, given their history. At the core of this was Philanthropy Northwest’s approach to learning about working in Indian Country,” says Peterson. He cites intentional efforts to begin a journey into Indian Country by listening and learning – by finding opportunities to partner with Native Americans in Philanthropy and Native leaders in a variety of ways, creating spaces for funders and Native leaders to develop relationships, and featuring Native-led programming, including conference sessions, over the years. “This open-minded approach and willingness to learn is what made Philanthropy Northwest seem like an ideal nominee for the award,” said Peterson.

Philanthropy Northwest is excited to continue our work in Indian Country, making new connections, and deepening existing relationships within Native American communities. We look forward to sharing what we are learning and to promoting dialogue in our upcoming report Journey into Indian Country: Lessons for Philanthropy. We hope that philanthropists and foundations will be inspired to learn more about the good work happening with Northwest’s Native communities.

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Getting to know Carly Hare

Tuesday, November 23rd, 2010

By Dionna Anderson
Program Assistant
Philanthropy Northwest

At a recent reception held at the Duwamish Longhouse and Cultural Center, I got a chance to ask Carly Hare, the new executive director for Native Americans in Philanthropy (NAP), a few questions. She spoke several times about NAP’s commitment to facilitating open dialogue among funders, Native Americans and nonprofits.

This commitment is apparent in the theme chosen for the 2011 Native Philanthropy Institute, which will be held in Washington at the Tulalip Resort and Casino, April 4-5, 2011: “Weaving Leadership, Indigenous People and Resources.” During the conference there will be presentations from both funders and Native nonprofit leaders who are working in Indian Country.

NAP’s goal for the next year is to keep building relationships and providing services for Indian Country through both their own gatherings and relationships with other regional membership organizations. Carly spoke about the strong relationship between Native Americans in Philanthropy and Philanthropy Northwest. She called the relationship “unique” and noted that there are over 70 tribes that fall within the Philanthropy Northwest geographic range.

I asked Carly if there was one thing that she would like people to know about Native Americans in Philanthropy and she again talked about how NAP is looking to “deepen and expand relationships with it’s partners to increase investment and impact in Indian Country.” I also asked Carly what she did for fun. She enjoys movies (the last one she saw was Megamind) and is trying to make herself enjoy running. Her favorite book is The Sparrow and she still makes mix tapes.

My last question for Carly was about the best advice she ever received. She said it came from her father, who would say, “It’s your own damn fault.” She said that he meant that we each have the choice in certain situations to either take action or not – we play a part in the outcome.

For more information about the Native Philanthropy Institute please visit the Native Americans in Philanthropy website. A special thanks to Philanthropy Northwest Grantmakers of Color Affinity Group and the Potlatch Fund for hosting the reception.

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Living History in Rural Colorado

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

By Richard Woo
CEO
The Russell Family Foundation

It’s Tuesday afternoon and the COF conference is winding down while the community site visit to rural Colorado ramps up. The next two days promise to be deeply moving and build on the conference themes of social change, social justice & social innovation.

Native Americans in Philanthropy (NAP) and Asian Americans & Pacific Islanders in Philanthropy (AAPIP) have organized a learning and healing pilgrimage to two sites of historical significance to our respective communities.

The first is Amache, where over 10,000 Japanese Americans were imprisoned during World War II in a desolate camp of makeshift wooden barracks. The second is Sand Creek, site of the Sand Creek Massacre of 1864 where over 150 Cheyenne and Arapaho people were slaughtered by Colorado militia volunteers. Ironically, the Indians were camped at Sand Creek awaiting peace talks with the U.S. military.

This is day one and I’ve been absorbed in “living history” by talking with Bob Fuchigami, who was imprisoned at Amache as a teenager (age 12) from 1942-1945. Bob, age 79 and a retired university professor living in Denver, is active in the historical preservation of the Amache Camp.

When asked about the Amache experience, Bob shares the following recollections, which include uncanny associations with my own family history, though I am Chinese American and they were not interned:

* Bob and his family were given six days notice by the U.S. government in 1942 to evacuate their farm and home in Yuba City in Northern California. President Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s Executive Order 9066 authorized the forced evacuation and imprisonment of Japanese Americans and Japanese nationals in 10 internment camps across rural America for purposes of national security. By coincidence, my maternal grandmother was born in Yuba City in the late 1800s.

* My dad, Bill Woo, told me that during the wartime hysteria following the Japanese bombing attack on Pearl Harbor, his family took precautionary measures by posting handmade signs in their car and farm trucks stating: “We are Chinese Americans.” There were many hands to make light work of those signs. My father was the first born son of 19 children in the San Fernando Valley near Los Angeles.

* Bob’s family were farmers and grew peaches and almonds. My dad and his brothers farmed cotton, alfalfa & safflower in Central California from the mid-1940s onward.

* In 1942 with no knowledge of their ultimate destination, the Fuchigami Family joined thousands of others at a detention center in Merced, California. Coincidentally, I was born ten years later in 1952 in Los Banos, California-30 miles from the county seat, Merced.

* From Merced, the Fuchigami Family and others were transported by rail for three days to Amache, often shut off from the light by shuttered windows to prevent them from seeing the surrounding landscape.

* Today, the tour bus, carrying more than 20 of us including Bob, crossed the same railroad tracks he traveled in 1942 destined for Amache. It is an eerie moment as Bob shares that memory with all of us.

* Settling into the barren high desert of Amache was a shock for the Fuchigami’s, having come from the relatively mild climate of Northern California. Bob recalls winter temperatures dropping to 22 degres below zero. The barracks serving as their home had dirt floors and wooden walls without insulation.

* As a 12 year old boy, Bob remembers being frightened by the armed guards, barbed wire fences and nightly intrusion of watchtower search lights.

* Bob’s mom and dad were 52 years and 60 years old respectively. If losing their farm, their house and their possessions was hard, camp life was harsher still. His mother survived a stroke in camp leaving her health compromised. Bob’s dad fell from a farm truck during camp and broke his back.

As Bob says before we head to our hotel rooms:

“The camp was not a good experience for us. I continue to do this preservation work for them (his parents). I keep asking myself: why would our government do this to us?”

Tomorrow we visit Amache and Sand Creek. While I look forward to doing so out of respect for those who came before us, I am also anxious about what emotions will be stirred by this “living history.”

Places have spiritual power because their physical presence hint at what has passed before. Places tie together events even though those events are separated by time.

That’s why it’s significant that Bob’s family farmed in Yuba City, where decades before my grandmother was born. It means something to me that Bob and I were separated by a mere 30 miles (Merced to Los Banos) and ten years of time. It’s haunting to cross the same railroad tracks where the Fuchigami Family passed 68 years before.

In the largest sense, Amache and Sand Creek are tied together by place though these events unfolded tens of decades apart. Such violations were sparked by a social dynamic that sadly transcends time and place, that is “fear of the other.”

For that reason, we are visiting these places to honor the intertwined history between indigenous peoples and Asian Pacific Islanders. Some may contend that dwelling on the past, especially such tragic events, is futile and self-defeating. In the framework of making positive change as described in Chip Heath’s book, “Switch: How to Change Things When Things Are Hard,” you might even label this TBU = True But Useless.

To the contrary, I believe this journey is indeed seeking the motivational “bright spots” that Chip Heath encourages all to do, including:

* BUILDING partnerships (NAP, AAPIP & allied funders) that fuel a common purpose to serve through philanthropy;

* SEEING tangible local community efforts to heal the wounds of history through cross-cultural education like the Koshare Indian Museum in Amache; and

* FEELING moved to take actions through our philanthropic work in the context of our communities back home that promote change, justice and innovation.

Originally published on the Philanthropy 411 blog.

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Blogging the COF Conference

Monday, April 26th, 2010

Philanthropy Northwest members Richard Woo of The Russell Family Foundation and Aleesha Towns-Bain of the Rasmuson Foundation are on the Philanthropy 411 blog team covering the 2010 COF conference in Denver this week. You can read all the posts from the conference here.

In a post about the Pre-Conference Institute for Trustees & CEOs, Richard wrote:

“Over time I learned the value of creative disruption. I used to approach board meetings using a corporate model of efficiency. I tried to gain alignment among trustees on issues before the actual board meeting through individual phone calls with trustees. The goal was to conduct a smooth, seamless board meeting in which all decisions were actually decided beforehand. That’s not really governance, that’s theater.

Now I believe it is more important to break trustees out of alignment in those pre-meeting phone calls and encourage them to express their divergent views in the actual meeting so we can have a deeper discussion of the issues. Hopefully this generates decisions that are more durable.”

Prior to the conference, Aleesha attended the Native Philanthropy Institute, hosted by Native Americans in Philanthropy. She wrote:

“Over and over again at the Native Philanthropy Institute, Native leaders and grantmakers said we must trust Tribal and Native organizations to come up with solutions for themselves–and then accept ways of doing that may not align to typical ways of doing business for Western-based organizations. Several Native American leaders pointed out that foundation and governmental funding can come with restrictions that are designed to be helpful, but end up representing an attempt to acculturate native organizations to a Western system of working.”

Keep checking the Philanthropy 411 blog this week for more from Aleesha, Richard and the COF conference.

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