Cangleska

Rising from the flat South Dakota landscape, the Lulyahan Oti shelter is a testament to a core value of the Oglala Lakota: fortitude. The modest building houses the only program of its kind for survivors of domestic violence and sexual assault on the isolated Pine Ridge Reservation.

Lulyahan Oti is the centerpiece of Cangleska, a grassroots group that integrates the Lakota culture with mainstream social services. Led by Native women, the organization offers temporary housing and culturally based counseling services. Cangleska staff also advocate for survivors as they navigate the law enforcement and court systems. The group campaigns nationally to raise awareness of violence against women in Native communities. According to federal data, Native women are far more likely than women of other ethnicities to experience abuse at the hands of their partners.
Cangleska’s origins go back more than 20 years, when local activists successfully pressured the tribal government to establish a law against domestic violence. At the time, there was little public recognition of the issue, but the group obtained seed money in a very creative way. “We wrote a grant for preventing at-home injuries to women,” recalled cofounder Karen Artichoker, “and talked about domestic violence.”
Cangleska’s approach centers on tribal cultural values—spirituality, family relationships, connection to nature and honoring women as “sacred life-givers.” In contrast to conventional shelters, survivors—who often come to the organization through referrals by law enforcement—receive care from women who share their background, and they can draw from traditional healing resources like sweat lodges and spirit-based ceremonies.
Alongside services for survivors, the organization offers rehabilitative programs for former perpetrators of domestic violence, with the mission of preventing abuse and reintegrating men into their community. Former abusers are treated not as outcasts but as clients, challenged to reorient their behavior around concepts of manhood grounded in tribal tradition.
“These guys are our relatives. They’re our sons, they’re our grandsons, they’re our nephews,” Artichoker said. “And we believe that there’s a goodness in all people and that everybody does want dignity and quality of life.”
Cangleska sees structural racism and social instability at the root of violence against women. Their model tackles domestic abuse as part of a continuum of inequities facing Native people, from economic gaps to underfunded public services to dysfunctional tribal governments.
“We live with violence every day,” Artichoker said. “You see the unrelenting poverty and the impact of that poverty on the development of families—it’s unquestionable.”
Cangleska has launched a nationwide project, Sacred Circle, to help other tribes develop their own intervention programs. And the group has branched out into economic development as a way to foster community stability. They recently launched an auto garage as part of a long-term strategy of empowering clients and families with sustainable local jobs.
“Whatever people need, whatever their belief system is,” Artichoker said, “we try to accommodate and help them so that they can be strengthened and look at their options and make decisions about their lives.”

Power

Hau Mitakiepi,

I come from a Family, some call our Family a gang, but either way, I come from People who always exercise. We have to. Due to the implosion of the Lakota Oyate, we grew up among a constant battle, some called it a feud.

All I know is it is more important than ever to be eating healthy and exercising. I work out every day. This beast known as america cannot last much longer. Indigenous Peoples know it will last not even 4 more years. Many “activists” do not know how reliant, dependent, and adherent to the system they really are. they are soft and not hard. They are takers and not makers. They are part of the system. We currently have no authority as Indigenous Peoples. Our Elders have been erased. We have olders now with no accumulated Wisdom.

Me though, I aint playing. I eat simply. I live simply. I am hard. I am this way because of the People I have been able to be around, my Relatives. They have taught me much. Whether winged, crawling, four legged or two, I have been listening. There are some of us left. There is still Lakota Oyate Ki. We shall remain as inherent to this Homeland and Grandmother of ours as ever.

For me, the battle I grew up in never ceased. My contemporaries of my Youth lay dead because they lived it all the way to the death. This is the example I follow. I shall consistently and constantly remain a living example of these ways walking.

Power is sometimes defined as strength and speed combining as relatives. Another kind of Power is the innate and inherent Power of our Roots as Indigenous Peoples.

My Relatives, time is short. Prepare for battle. Time herself shall separate the Buffalo from the bovine. KIKTAPO! Hecetuwelo.

-Wanbli Wiwohkpe

February in Native History

February 29
On this day in 1940, under the Indian Reorganization Act, constitution and bylaws were ratified for the Native village of Point Hope. Located on the northwest coast of Alaska, it’s the oldest occupied Inupiaq area.

February 28
On this day in 2006, the Six Nations occupied a housing development site in Ontario, Canada. The Native people reclaimed land in Caledonia they say was wrongfully taken away from them by the crown.

February 27
On this day in 1934, famed Kiowa author N. Scott Momaday was born in Lawton , Oklahoma.

February 26
On this day in 1925, a presidential proclamation was issued to create the Glacier Bay National Monument in Alaska. The action was taken without regard for Alaska Natives, who used the area for hunting, fishing and gathering.

February 25
On this day in 1998, the Oglala Lakota tribal council declared the anniversary of the Wounded Knee occupation a tribal holiday. It designated the occupation a historical and cultural event that brought national attention to Native American issues.

February 22
During this week in 2007, Chief Illiniwek danced his last dance during the University of Illinois men’s basketball game. The mascot was the center of controversy. It was dropped more than two years after being named “hostile and abusive” by the National Collegiate Athletic Association.

February 21
On this day in 1935, The Mackenzie Inuit of the Western Canadian Arctic received a herd of domestic reindeer. It was part of an economic initiative formed by the Canadian government.

February 20
On this day in 1941, world-renown Cree musician Buffy Sainte-Marie was born in Saskatchewan, Canada.

February 19
On this day in 1858, Nisqually leader, Chief Leschi, was hanged. He was charged with murder. The chief and others insisted he had not committed the crime. Today, tribes in Washington State commemorate the martyred leader.

February 18
On this day in 1946, political activist John Trudell was born in Omaha, Nebraska. After serving in the Vietnam War, the Santee Sioux became actively involved in the takeover of Alcatraz Island. He joined the American Indian Movement or AIM and also served as a national chairman.

February 15
On this day in 2007, the Mashpee Wampanoag Tribe in Massachusetts gained federal recognition status. The tribe has since made headlines after its chairman stepped down for lying about his military record and serving jail time for rape. The tribe has also been in the news for its efforts to build a casino in the state.

February 14
On this day in 1931, Canyon de Chelly, located on the Navajo reservation in northeastern Arizona, was established as a U.S. National Monument. It

Winds of Change: Wanbli Wiwohkpe

Hau Mitakiepi,

It is hard being Indigenous. It is hard being Lakota. Everything was taken from us. We were made to become ignorant. We were made to become ignorant of Relatedness and the Affinity of the Indigenous. Now, in this world which has pauperized us, we often seek routes to