PRESS & MEDIA |
PRESS & MEDIA |
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Earlier this year we shared the news of our work with Tribal members and strategic partners on a ten year plan we call Vision 2035; a dramatic shift in our programming that will provide job training, entrepreneurial skills and income for our Native relatives across the areas of bison herd management and sales, tiny home building and cultivating cash crops. Throughout 2025 we remained focused on this vision and, in this last email of the year, we are excited to share with you the first in a three part series of Vision 2035 project timelines. This rigorous timeline represents a clear path forward, developed in partnership with finance and bison industry experts, herd managers, and CSU’s Department of Veterinary Medicine. Despite the complexities facing our communities, we are poised to reach our 2026 milestones!
None of this would be possible without you. To our 2025 supporters: you have provided more than just food and warmth for those we serve. Your belief in our mission has been a true source of inspiration, keeping us focused on our long-term vision despite significant hurdles. We are clear-eyed about the road ahead; the work we do is challenging, and we are navigating truly unprecedented times. Yet, with your continued support - through sweat equity, thought partnership, and financial contributions - we remain confident in our ability to build a more sustainable and humane future for our Native relatives. Wishing you all a happy and healthy 2026! - Lori and The Tipi Raisers' Team P.S. Stay tuned here on our website or through these newsletters for both in person and virtual Vision 2035 information sessions!
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Yesterday at the Wounded Knee Massacre site, and on the 135th anniversary of the massacre, all three members of the South Dakota congressional delegation attended a memorial event recognizing the recent passage of the Wounded Knee Massacre Memorial and Sacred Site Act. This act secures 40 acres of the site for the Oglala and Cheyenne River Tribes... and is being spoken of by the Oglala and Cheyenne River tribal councils, most media sources and the South Dakota government as a significant step forward. Wounded Knee Memorial and cemetery on the Pine Ridge Reservation. (Photo by Makenzie Huber/South Dakota Searchlight) I acknowledge that this is a step forward, but ...
TIMELINE:
HERE’S WHAT ALSO HAPPENED YESTERDAY:
WHY DOES THIS MATTER? For many of us who work with, play with, live with, visit, donate to, volunteer and pray for the Lakota people on Pine Ridge as well as Indigenous peoples on the hundreds of other reservations around the United States, we have come to understand that helping and changing generations of trauma, racism (from all sides), profound poverty, corruption, etc. is an immense challenge. We also know that conventional ways of offering help are not nearly enough, and - in fact - can cause harm in many ways. We recognize that the Act, the time extended by the South Dakota delegation, the presence of the Tribal Council Presidents, and the attendance of those who gathered to acknowledge the signing were likely motivated by good intentions AND:
Along with incredibly devoted, inspired, hard-working and positive tribal members, volunteers, donors and supporters from around the world, we are entering the second year of Vision 2035. We are steadfastly focused and committed to creating long term, sustainable change to the reservations – in collaboration with those living in the communities we serve, as well as with people and institutions from around the world. Please join us. -Dave, Executive Director |
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December 2025
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