MAKE YOUR IMPACT NOW:
SUPPORT RE-MEMBER’S WORK

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A Clear and Urgent Need for Philanthropic Support

The need for philanthropic support on the Pine Ridge Reservation is so clear and urgent that it can be overwhelming. Where can your gift help the most? At Re-Member, we work to secure donations for several key areas.

Donations to our General Fund help us purchase and maintain the materials, equipment, vehicles, and facilities needed for the construction projects that comprise much of our work and improve the quality of life for many Oglala Lakota families.

Donations to our Seasonal Funds help us source, cut, split, and deliver firewood and provide emergency electric and propane assistance during the cold winter months and operate and expand our Feather II Garden Program during the growing season.

Donations to our Feather II Fund help cover the costs of completing a new home for Re-Member that will create dynamic opportunities to expand and develop our program on Pine Ridge.

Donations of clothing and personal hygiene items are distributed to members of the Pine Ridge community from our on-site donation center.

Wherever you choose to direct your support, the impact will be meaningful for the Oglala Lakota people living on the Pine Ridge Reservation.

 

“Children must early learn the beauty of generosity. They are taught to give what they prize most, that they may taste the happiness of giving.”

—Charles Eastman, Santee Dakota

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Monetary Donations to Our General Fund

Although Re-Member charges modest trip fees to help cover costs associated with our volunteer program, our important work on Pine Ridge is funded in large part by charitable gifts from individual, corporate, and nonprofit donors.

Charitable gifts of all sizes to our General Fund help do a variety of things.

Purchase the Materials and Tools Needed for Our Construction Projects

Re-Member depends on donations to buy materials for projects like entry stairs and trailer skirting.

The bunk beds, entry stairs, wheelchair ramps and outhouses we build — along with the trailer skirting we install — all require lumber and hardware, both of which have increased dramatically in price during the last year. Our building projects utilize a wide variety of hand tools, saws, sanders, cordless drills, and safety equipment for staff and volunteers — all of which must be maintained and periodically replaced.

Expected approximate project costs:

Respond to Immediate Community Needs

We regularly support walk-in requests from the community in emergency situations. Benevolent support is offered on a case-by-case basis to support urgent personal needs for food, fuel, clothing and uncovered healthcare expenses. 

We also support community activities, including powwows, youth sports, school events, and health/wellness gatherings across the reservation.

Maintain Our Facilities, Vehicles, and Equipment

We operate several simple but functional facilities, including our volunteer quarters, a commercial kitchen, construction workshop, and administrative office that require regular upkeep and occasional repairs. Heavy rains and deep snow demand constant attention for our gravel road and parking lots, including plowing each winter.

Gifts to the General Fund help maintain Re-Member’s hardworking vehicles and equipment.

Our fleet of trucks, vans, buses, and trailers take a beating from the reservation’s rough roads, long distances, and extreme weather. Diligent maintenance — performed locally whenever possible — is mandatory.

In support of our daily operations, we also maintain a variety of chainsaws, wood splitters, and farm/garden equipment, including tractors and various implements.

 

“It is not the magnitude of our actions but the amount of love that is put into them that matters.”

—Mother Teresa

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Monetary Donations to Our Seasonal Funds

In addition to our General Fund, we encourage donations to two seasonal priorities: our Community Garden Program during the spring and summer and our Winter Heating Assistance Program during the fall and winter.

Help Grow Our Community Gardens

The Pine Ridge Reservation is a food desert — with just one full-service grocery store. Our 2.5-acre community garden is the beginning of a reservation-wide hub system to address this. In collaboration with our South Dakota State University Extension partners, we are building a network of home and school-based gardens, and developing the skills of individuals to grow their own produce.

Re-Member’s community garden is the beginning of a reservation-wide hub system to address a scarcity of healthy food options.

Re-Member’s community garden is the beginning of a reservation-wide hub system to address a scarcity of healthy food options.

We have erected two hoop-house greenhouses on our property, to aid in growing during the unpredictable spring and fall gardening seasons. These facilities will begin production in 2022.

Future plans include the introduction of a “veggie wagon,” providing our staff the opportunity to travel across the reservation to distribute fresh produce and offer knowledge and material resources to establish additional community-based gardens. 

The first Tuesday of May is “Growing Tuesday,” a kick-off event for the summer gardening season.

Donations to this fund are accepted from April through September, annually. 

Help Us Keep Families Warm

During the cold, windy prairie winters — when temperatures can drop below zero for days at a time — many families on the Pine Ridge Reservation struggle to keep their homes heated. Donations to support our Winter Heating Assistance Program provide families and elders with firewood through the winter, along with emergency propane and electric utility assistance.

During a typical winter, we cut, split, and deliver more than 400 truckloads of firewood to homes across the reservation and provide emergency electric assistance and propane assistance, paid directly to utility companies.

Every year on Giving Tuesday, the Tuesday after Thanksgiving, Re-Member encourages donations to help heat homes on Pine Ridge.

Donations to this fund are accepted from October through March, annually.

 

“It is a paradox in the contemporary world that in our desire for peace, we must willingly give ourselves to struggle.”

—Linda Hogan, Chickasaw

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Supplies, Tools, and Equipment from our Amazon Wish List

Re-Member’s daily operation depends on quality tools that are purchased and maintained with donations.

Re-Member maintains a “wish list” of currently needed program supplies, tools and equipment on Amazon. Contributions help defer our program expenses, allowing us to allocate funds to other urgent needs.

 

“Poverty is not a lack of character. It is a lack of money. It’s a lack of opportunity. It’s a lack of investment. It’s when a society turns its back on you and makes you invisible.”

—Rutger Bregman

 

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Material Donations for Pine Ridge Community Members

Material donations for use by Pine Ridge community members are always needed. Re-Member maintains an on-site donation center for these items. Often, volunteers bring items for donations with them; items can also be shipped. Please refer to this list for general needs, or contact our on-site donation coordinator, Kimberly Black Elk, to learn about our most urgent current needs.

+ Suggested Items

PERSONAL CARE PRODUCTS

  • Women — Hairbrush, deodorant, body soap/wash, sanitary napkins, shampoo, conditioner, hair ties, toothbrush/paste
  • Men — Comb, deodorant, body soap/wash, shampoo, conditioner, hair ties, toothbrush/paste, razor, shaving cream
  • Toddlers — Toothbrush/paste
  • Infants — Diapers (sizes 3/4/5), diaper wipes, diaper rash cream, baby bottles w/ nipples, Enfamil w/ iron

CLOTHING

New and packaged undergarments and socks; otherwise, new or laundered, gently used clothing, shoes and boots

  • Infants — Baby blankets, sleepers (newborn to age 2); any-sized clothing
  • Toddlers/Children/Youth — Any-sized clothing and footwear; undergarments, socks
  • Adults — Clothing and footwear (for hot or cold season); undergarments, socks

BACK TO SCHOOL

  • Backpacks, spiral notebooks & loose-leaf (wide & college rule), composite notebooks, binders, dividers, folders, book covers, crayons, colored pencils, markers, highlighters, pens (black, red & blue), pencils, erasers, pencil cases/pouches, pencil sharpeners, glue, glue sticks, scissors, rulers, memory cards, tissue, zip lock bags etc.
  • Socks, underwear (must be new and packaged; all sizes)

CHRISTMAS/WINTER

  • New unopened toys for any age
  • Hats, gloves, scarves
  • Jackets

MEDICAL SUPPLIES We are happy to accept Ace wraps, ankle/knee braces, wheelchairs/walkers, canes, and crutches. We respectfully ask that you do not send or bring: medications (new or out of date), syringes or needles, diabetic supplies, nebulizers, ostomy supplies, Vac dressings, or any previously opened personal care/medical products.

 

“When we have plenty of money or blankets, we give them away to other chiefs and people, and by and by they return them with interest, and our hearts feel good. Our way of giving is our bank.”

—Chief Maquinna, Nootka

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Growing our Future: Re-Member’s “Feather II” Project

Although our current facilities have served Re-Member well, the time has come to grow, and design with intention, a new facility for our program. We currently operate within a footprint that was not designed to accommodate the varied needs of housing volunteers and staff, maintaining vehicles, operating workshops, and gathering with our Lakota neighbors.

We purchased a 160-acre parcel of land, just east of the reservation’s Porcupine community. This new property — our future home, which we call Feather II — offers dynamic opportunities to further develop our program on the Pine Ridge Reservation.

Volunteers and staff constructed two hoop-house greenhouses at the Feather II site in 2020.

To date, two administrative offices (one leased to South Dakota State University Extension) and a two-bedroom residence have been constructed. We have designed and planted a 2.5-acre community garden, and erected two hoop-house greenhouses, with supporting infrastructure. The next phase of construction will bring our Community Education Center and Learning Kitchen, along with staff and volunteer housing to completion.

Feather II will enable Re-Member to:

  • Operate energy-efficient buildings, designed specifically for our program

  • Cultivate numerous community gardens, providing fresh vegetables and fruit to community members without ready access to fresh produce

  • Provide appropriate and necessary privacy and safety for volunteers and their possessions in stand-alone dorm facilities

  • Operate permanent and dedicated space for accepting and distributing donations to community members

  • Host large community dinners, furthering our mission of building relationships between volunteers and the Lakota

  • Offer permanent housing for all full-time and long-term staff members

  • Shelter and maintain the Re-Member vehicle fleet and heavy equipment

  • Continue and expand our current work projects to meet our overwhelming requests for assistance

  • Partner with other non-profit organizations, state agencies, and individuals on future projects of interest to Re-Member

There are endless opportunities at Feather II, many only beginning to be imagined. To learn more about our Feather II project, please contact Executive Director Will Paese.