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Congratulations to the 2022-2023 Ozhigin Fellows!

Tiwahe Foundation joins Mni Sota Fund in celebrating this year’s Ozhigin Fellows. The group is made up of eleven powerhouse Native business owners in Minnesota who are readying themselves for their next stage of growth.

The fellows represent a range of expertise and talent. Their businesses are from many different industries, like beauty and fashion, cultural art and medicines, construction, music, fitness and sports, and domestic services.

This cohort came to Ozhigin already empowered. Beginning the program back in October 2022, nearly all of the Fellows reported confidence in being able to achieve their personal and business goals and eagerness to develop skills to realize their goals. That mindset of growth and abundance for Native people is paramount for success—more so than the technical skills we can master. As Native peoples, we are stymied by the generational impacts of not seeing the possibilities before us because instead we have seen the intentional exclusion of our parents, grandparents, and great-grandparents from mainstream economic, social, and civic life.

Any time one of us takes a leap of faith, like entrepreneurship, the rest of us need to celebrate because they are creating vital pathways for others– especially our Native youth.

In 2022, Tiwahe Foundation joined Mni Sota Fund in a partnership to collaboratively meet the programmatic and financial needs of the Ozhigin Fellowship program. Over the last nine months, the Fellows have worked with Mni Sota Fund staff and consultants to further develop their financial and business management skills. Tiwahe’s value-add through relaunching the Oyate Leadership Network, is gained understanding of how cultural values and teachings can be shared and applied to the experiences of Native businessowners. Together we are learning how we can best support networking that fulfills more than just a professional connection.

Later this year, we’ll be coming back together with the Fellows to facilitate some of the deeper conversations around topics they shared with us this past spring. For example, a “truth telling” opportunity to share experiences as Native businessowners, inviting in other seasoned Native entrepreneurs to talk about how being Native in this space impacts them and how their Native identity and culture fit into the day-to-day reality of running a business. Another desired conversation is how to manage and supervise Native staff (and others), formed from a trust-based relationship.

Meet the 2022-2023 Ozhigin Fellows and their businesses.

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John Boyd

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Tanagidan To Win

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Brendan Kishketon

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George Spears

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Lesley Crowghost

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Keith Clark

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Kari Tribble

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Amelia Kevan

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Warren Mountain

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Angela Vig

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Meeg-wun Desjarlait

This group of trailblazers also demonstrates the values of leadership that should be modeled by greater society, especially corporations. Their bottom line is not based solely on profit, but giving back to community. At least two of the current fellows are also past Tiwahe AIFEP grant recipients. One, Tara Perron, utilized an AIFEP grant to launch Blue Hummingbird Woman, an Indigenous “Heart Medicine” shop in downtown St. Paul as a way to care for her community through plant medicine and increasing visibility of other Native talent. Her goal isn’t to franchise or become a millionaire, it’s giving back by uplifting local Native artists and creators in her storefront. Angela Vig, who owns Vig’s Guitars, is another past AIFEP recipient. Angela spends substantial time nurturing the love of music and instruments with Native youth as healing, but also demonstrating that a livelihood in music is possible. Her business also organizes many charitable live music events and donates to local causes.

Along with Mni Sota Fund, we are so proud of these inspiring Native leaders and we encourage you to learn more and share their businesses with those in your circle of relatives, friends, colleagues and neighbors.

See the announcement from our partner, Mni Sota Fund, for the first ever artist cohort of Ozhigin Fellows!

About Tiwahe

Our mission is to strengthen Indigenous leadership and cultural identity.

We invest in and cultivate Indigenous prosperity and excellence by providing resources including grants, traditional knowledge, and learning communities that foster cultural enrichment, self-determination, and reciprocal relationships. In doing so, we create the conditions that allow our people to generate positive intergenerational ripple effects in American Indian communities.

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125 SE Main St, Suite 222, Minneapolis, MN 55414

612-722-0999

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