Land Acknowledgement Statement and Resources
Land Acknowledgement
Macalester College is located on the homeland of the Dakota people – Mni Sota Makoce [Mini SOta Ma-KOH-chay], which translates to Land Where the Waters Reflect the Clouds. Although they were forcibly exiled by aggressive and persistent settler colonialism, the Dakota people still flourish despite this painful history. We make this acknowledgment to honor the Dakota people, ancestors, and descendants, as well as the land itself. Macalester engages in ongoing work toward repair and partnership with the Dakota people and the land, as well as to support Indigenous members of our campus community.
Native and Indigenous initiatives at Macalester
Mellon MNI Grant
With generous support from the Mellon Foundation, the Mellon Macalester Native and Indigenous (MNI) initiative is dedicated to engagement with and scholarship around Indigenous people, culture, and history, including a Global Indigenous Studies concentration, post-doctoral scholars, an annual residency program for Indigenous experts, an Indigenous Voices series featuring speakers, artists, and activists, a Building and Caring for Community seminar, and a Three Sisters Garden.
Native and Indigenous Faculty and Staff Affinity Group
The Native and Indigenous Staff and Faculty Collective is a community space for connection, support, and collaboration.
Native and Indigenous Heritage Month programs
Macalester actively works to engage with and advance scholarship around Native and Indigenous communities, histories and narratives, ways of knowing and being, and current social justice movements. During this month, we center Native and Indigenous stories and cultures, celebrate community, build awareness, and engage with Native-owned businesses, artistic endeavors, and scholarship.
Proud Indigenous Peoples for Education Student Organization (PIPE)
Since its founding in the 1970s, PIPE has served as a space for building and strengthening the Indigenous student community at Macalester. PIPE serves three main goals: to exist as an unapologetically Indigenous space working to support and serve Indigenous students, to connect and engage with the broader Indigenous community in the Twin Cities, and to provide a platform for learning, education and discussion around issues that affect Indigenous communities.
- Contact: pipe@macalester.edu
- Staff Advisors: Mads Clark and Cait Bergeon
Admissions and Financial Aid
The Admissions Office partners with College Horizons to actively facilitate pathways to Macalester for Native high school students, including a summer workshop. Macalester meets 100 percent of the full demonstrated need of every student we admit, and all first-year applicants are considered for merit-based scholarships.
Visit the Admissions website for more information about Indigenous Communities at Macalester.
Racial Justice Project Fund
Through the generosity of contributions to the Macalester Fund’s Racial Equity Support designation, the college offers funding for programs, projects, and events that advance racial justice at Macalester. All students, faculty, and staff are eligible to submit proposals. Proposals are reviewed by a committee of staff, faculty, and students. Proposals are submitted the semester prior to the event or program date. Please visit the website for proposal parameters and deadlines.
Dakota Land Campus Mural
Macalester is partnering with Minneapolis artist Natchez Beaulieu, Waabigwanikwe (Flower Woman), an Anishinaabekwe from the White Earth Nation, to create an acrylic mural covering the columns in the Link between the library and Old Main. This is part of our ongoing work to think critically about how we care for—and educate about—the Dakota land we are on.
Native and Indigenous Senior Advisory Committee to the President
Established by President Suzanne M. Rivera in 2023, the Native and Indigenous Senior Advisory Committee provides counsel and guidance regarding Macalester initiatives. The Committee is composed of Native and Indigenous community leaders from across Minnesota, and meets with the President and Macalester leadership regularly.
Learning Resources
To learn about Dakota land and communities in Minneapolis and St. Paul:
- Dr. Katrina Phillips (History), “Where the Waters Reflect the Clouds”: Examining Minnesota’s Indigenous History,” The Metropole
- The Land, Water, and Language of the Dakota, Minnesota’s First People, Created by Teresa Peterson and Walter LaBatte, Jr., Minnesota Historical Society
- The Bdote Memory Map is a virtual map that connects Dakota knowledge and places that may be familiar by other names to visitors of the area. The Memory Map introduces “traditional and sometimes sacred places erased in public community memory” in order to “recognize this region as Dakota homeland.”
- The Minnesota Historical Society’s Native American Initiatives Department serves as a bridge between community needs and MNHS resources, engaging with Native communities and nations throughout the state, and ensuring Native voices, stories, and concerns are addressed in MNHS work.
- The Minnesota Humanities Center offers opportunities to learn from Dakota community members about the sacred sites in St. Paul in the Learning From Place: Bdote immersive experience.
- In 2020, Abigail R. Thomsen wrote her senior honors project, Beyond 106: Descendant-Centered Collaboration to Interpret Dakota Archaeological Sites at Macalester’s Katharine Ordway Natural History Study Area (KONHSA), about the “absence of frameworks for collaborative interpreting of Indigenous archaeological sites,” and engaged in a “descendent-centered collaboration with representatives from the Dakota communities to create two interpretive signs for Macalester’s Katharine Ordway Natural History Study Area (KONHSA).”
To learn about Dakota and Anishinaabe (Ojibwe) nations in Minnesota:
- U.S.-Dakota War, Minnesota Historical Society
- Why Treaties Matter, Minnesota Humanities Center
- Dakota and Ojibwe Treaties, Minnesota Indian Affairs Council
Community Organizations
- Native Governance Center
- Minneapolis American Indian Center
- Minnesota Indian Affairs Council
- Native American Development Institute
- Division of Indian Work
- Wakan Tipi Awanyankapi
- Owámniyomni Okhódayapi
- Minnesota Indian Women’s Resource Center
- Native American Community Clinic
- Land Recovery and Land Back Organizations
- Dakota Language and Culture Resources