| Minnesota is home to the Dakota
and Ojibwe people with seven Ojibwe reservations and four Dakota communities.
The twin cities of Minneapolis and Saint Paul has been one of the
nations leading urban Indian Centers at the forefront of addressing
a myriad of issues affecting the quality of life for urban Indian
people. American Indian activism ignited in the twin cities with the
founding of the American Indian Movement and the hope for change spread
throughout Indian country in the late 1960’s. It
is estimated that over 30,000 American Indian people reside in the
seven county metropolitan areas. There are over forty different
tribal nations represented in the metro area. There are approximately
seventy-five agencies that serve the social, economic, health and
educational needs of American Indian people located in the metro
area. In the State of Minnesota there are about 200 American Indian
owned businesses. There are several American Indian culture based
schools that exist in both Minneapolis and Saint Paul including
the Indian Education Programs in the public school systems. Four
Tribal Colleges reside in Minnesota serving their respective communities:
Fond du Lac Tribal & Community College, Leech Lake Tribal College,
White Earth Tribal & Community College and the Red Lake Nation
College.
The Department of American Indian Studies is the
co-host of the American Indian Culture House, a living and learning
community for American Indian students attending their first year
at the University of Minnesota. The house is located at Comstock
Hall in the heart of the east bank campus and next to the Coffman
Memorial Student Union. The Coordinator on campus is Jillian Rowan
and she can be reached at 612-616-0733 or email at berkl002@umn.edu
The Department of American Indian Studies beginning
in 1994 provided the Minnesota Indian Affairs electronic listserv
that currently has over 400 subscribers. It has been a tremendous
communication tool to share news, community announcements, employment
and educational opportunities for Indian communities both urban
and rural.
We have nurtured many partnerships that include
the Dakota and Ojibwe Language Revitalization Alliance, Minnesota
History Center, Metropolitan Urban Indian Director’s, Anishinabe
Academy, Minnesota American Indian Chamber of Commerce, Grotto Foundation,
American Indian Families Project and continue to work with various
agencies that serve indigenous populations.
Our student organizations, the Dakota Language
Society and the Ojibwe Language Society both host community language
tables in the Minneapolis Indian community weekly through the academic
year. The language tables have grown through the years and are being
established in other communities around Minnesota.
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