2025 Catalyst Land Acknowledgement

May 15, 2025 • By: MNA, Montana Nonprofit Association

Montana is the traditional homeland and common hunting grounds of several tribes, including the Assiniboine, Blackfeet, Chippewa Cree, Crow, Gros Ventre, Kootenai, Little Shell, Northern Cheyenne, Pend d’Oreille, Plains Cree, Salish, Sioux, Hidatasa, Mandan, and Arikara. Today this land is home to twelve sovereign tribes with over 67,000 enrolled members. 

When MNA hosts large, ticketed events, we have made a commitment to partner with a Native led and serving organization to take our acknowledgement into action. Past partners have included Western Native VoiceHelena Indian Alliance,  All Nations Health Center, and Chief Dull Knife College. In most cases this partnership includes a donation in the amount an MNA Member ticket registration, sharing a Call to Action or message written by the partner, and an invitation to provide a welcome at the event. We also sometimes invite audience members to make additional donations to the organization throughout the event. This is always dependent on the partner and their needs and wishes. 

We are still learning in this practice and expect it to evolve. At this year’s Catalyst Leadership Summit we are honored to partner with Montana Two Spirit Society.

Please enjoy the note below from Montana Two Spirit Society Community Engagement Coordinator, Sheldon Clairmont: 

Hello and welcome to Missoula, Montana. The Montana Two Spirit Society welcomes you on behalf of our community and the Montana Nonprofit Association. Our organization has been operating in some capacity for almost 30 years, aiming to uplift and support the two-spirit community both within the state and beyond. For those who may not know, two-spirit is a contemporary umbrella term that is meant to differentiate indigenous understandings of gender and sexuality from western colonial identities. As an organization it is our mission to educate about and uplift the two-spirit and native LGBTQ+ peoples here in the state, giving them spaces to express and celebrate their authentic selves and allow them to have the knowledge and understanding to reclaim their traditional spaces within their tribal communities.

We are so grateful that so many organizations and groups have come together to support our community. Not only does our line of work take time and effort, it also takes connection and collaboration with each other to truly create lasting change. We are honored to be a part of this collective effort, and again, we welcome you to our home here in Missoula and thank you for your time and dedication to creating positive change within our communities.

 

 

Why do we do land acknowledgements? 

The United States is Indigenous territory and has been stewarded by Indigenous people since time immemorial. This knowledge provides us with an opportunity, not only to recognize the painful history upon which the state of Montana exists, founded on state-sanctioned and state-funded genocide, which included warfare, displacement, and dispossession of ancestral lands, broken treaties, desecration of sacred sites, destruction of the environment through extractive industries, and near-genocide of buffalo, criminalization of religious and cultural practices, residential boarding schools, allotment, removal of children from families, but also the ongoing efforts to diminish tribal sovereignty, the violence directed at these communities through Murdered and Missing Indigenous women, and the disparate impacts of poverty, voting barriers, incarceration, and police killings on Indigenous people. This is not intended to be an exhaustive list, which only emphasizes the need for change.

Moreover, this knowledge necessitates solidarity and collaboration led by Indigenous people, alongside Black, brown, and other people of color, and including others because true liberation will only come from confronting our history, understanding the divisions, celebrating our love, joy, laughter, and knowledge, and uniting against the oppression of this earth and all people.  

Land acknowledgements cannot repair inequity or return stolen land. No one entity can fix these issues, it will take a community guided by duty, responsibility, reciprocity with care for each other and the land. Therefore, as an association, MNA strives to represent all our members, but our mission is to serve the entire nonprofit sector in Montana. We know we are stronger together, but to truly come together we must all commit to education, action, and change. We are slowly beginning this work, and humbly invite those of you ahead of us to help lead, and those of you just beginning to join alongside. 

Thank you for joining us for this moment of reflection, and we welcome your suggestions for ways we can continue growing together. 

View our 2024 MNA Annual Conference Land Acknowledgement here.

View our 2023 MNA Annual Conference Land Acknowledgement here.

View our 2022 MNA Annual Conference Land Acknowledgement here.

 

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