Bush Prize: Native Nations

Honorees

2024 Bush Prize: Native Nations

October 22nd, 2024 - 

In partnership with the Bush Foundation, the Good Relatives Collaborative celebrates organizations in communities in Minnesota, North and South Dakota as well as the 23 Native Nations that share the same geography. Today, along with our community grant partners, we’re excited to announce the 2024 Bush Prize: Native Nations recipients. 

Please join us is congratulating Lakota Nation Invitational and the Minnesota Indian Women’s Sexual Assault Coalition for their incredible work!

About the Bush Prize: Native Nations

The Bush Prize: Native Nations award recognizes and honors organizations that are Native-led community serving organizations across the region. It prioritizes organizations who are highly valued within Native communities and have a track record of successful community problem-solving. The award is flexible and gives recipients up to $500,000 or 25% of the applicant’s most recent operating budget — which will help them to further their work in whatever way they see fit.  After being vetted by an independent anonymous grant review panel of well-respected Native community members, the Good Relatives Collaborative is excited to announce this year’s recipients along with the semifinalists. We congratulate the Bush Prize: Native Nations honorees and celebrate their work!

Lakota Nation Invitational convenes the largest multi-sport youth empowerment tournaments in South Dakota, connecting Native youth across a broad spectrum of athletic, academic, and cultural events centered on respect, accountability, and inclusivity.

Minnesota Indian Women’s Sexual Assault Coalition supports culturally grounded, grassroots advocacy and provides national leadership to end sexual violence.


We would like to recognize the three semi finalist organizations who are also doing incredible work serving our community: American Indian Community Housing Organization, Montessori American Indian Childcare Center, and Tribal Nations Research Group. Each of these organizations will receive $10,000 to help further their missions.

For any media inquiries please contact Alexandra Buffalohead: abuffalohead@nacdi.org.

2023 Bush Prize: Native Nations

Two Native-led nonprofits in Minnesota awarded Bush Prize grant award

October 17, 2023 - For immediate press release

The newly-formed Good Relatives Collaborative is thrilled to honor two innovative, Native-led community serving organizations based in Minneapolis, MN with the highly-esteemed 2023 Bush Prize. Please join us in congratulating Dream of Wild Health and Little Earth Residents Association for their incredible work!

In 2021, The St. Paul-based Bush Foundation invited Native-led and Native-serving community partners that are working on the ground in Minnesota, North Dakota and South Dakota to lead and administer grantmaking for the prestigious Bush Prize grant and their own grantmaking program. In response to this invite, the Good Relatives Collaborative began a journey of Indigenous-centered grantmaking focused on healing. The mission of GRC is to provide responsive grants to grassroots and Native-led organizations engaged in community-powered solutions.

In 2023, the GRC was pleased to open the Bush Prize grant application portal to Native-led community serving organizations across the 3-state region of MN, ND and SD. The Bush Prize prioritizes organizations who are highly valued within Native communities and have a track record of successful community problem-solving. The Bush Prize is flexible and has a maximum award of $500,000 or up to 25% of the applicant’s most recent operating budget. After being vetted by an independent grant review panel of well-respected Native community members, the GRC is pleased to announce that 2 Minnesota nonprofits have uniquely demonstrated the values of being a good relative, caring for their local communities, and advancing healing and change in their Native communities. Please join us in honoring the following two Bush Prize grant recipients, along with three semifinalists:

·        Dream of Wild Health (DHW). Founded in 1986, DHW’s mission is to restore health and well-being in the Native community by recovering knowledge of and access to healthy Indigenous foods, medicines and lifeways. With this Bush Prize grant, their dream is to grow the number of Indigenous farmers in the region, expand and deepen youth programming, and model a regenerative relationship with the land that adapts to and mitigates climate change. Click here to watch a video about them.

·        Little Earth Resident Association (LERA). Founded in 1973, LERA’s mission is to empower residents by creating a culturally strong, supportive, healthy and unified Little Earth community. With this Bush Prize grant, their dream is to empower Native residents and increase their homeownership, generational knowledge, and wealth. Click here to watch a video about them.

·        While not awarded the Bush Prize grant, the GRC would like to recognize three other incredible community serving organizations who made the semifinalist grant round. They include Racing Magpie, Spirit Lake Youth Sports and Pine Ridge Parks, Recreation & Trails.

Looking ahead, the GRC plans to invite the community to recognize and honor Dream of Wild Health and Little Earth Residents Association at a public ceremony to be scheduled by December. Follow the GRC on Facebook to catch this event, more news, and future grant opportunities.

For any media inquiries, please contact us through this website.