Cheryl Crazy Bull Appears at D.C.Generation Indigenous Meeting; Michelle Obama Offers Support

Apr 29, 2015 | Blog

 

Cheryl Crazy Bull Appears at D.C.Generation Indigenous Meeting; Michelle Obama Offers Support

April 29, 2015

President Cheryl Crazy Bull appeared in Washington, D.C. on April 8 at the White House with other Native leaders to offer her thoughts about the challenges facing Native youth today, and ways to overcome those challenges. First Lady Michelle Obama addressed the convening; click here for her full remarks.

The meeting was part of the Generation Indigenous initiative launched by President Obama and First Lady Obama after their visit in 2014 to the Standing Rock Reservation in South Dakota, where he was dismayed by conditions that young Native people face in their daily lives.

The initiative, know as Gen I, is being overseen by the Center for Native American Youth at the Aspen Institute. The program seeks to build a National Native Youth Network to provide a sustainable platform to reach out, engage, and provide educational and economic opportunities for Native youth. The network provides a framework for connecting with youth leaders, resources that focus attainment of higher education, entrepreneurship training, mentoring, and a platform to integrate Native youth voices into the national dialogue.

The American Indian College Fund has endorsed the Gen I program and launched the Gen I Challenge with tribal college students at the American Indian Higher Education Consortium annual student meeting in Albuqurque in March 2015. For ongoing information about the program or to get involved, please join us on Facebook in our group Native scholars.

 

Recent Blog Posts

Remembering Senator Ben Nighthorse Campbell (Northern Cheyenne) 

Remembering Senator Ben Nighthorse Campbell (Northern Cheyenne) 

The former Senator Ben Nighthorse Campbell passed December 30, 2025, surrounded by family shortly after a visit with tribal elders. Eddie Box Jr. sang the sacred Southern Ute Sundance songs which carried Native people between worlds for generations, and the vision of Nighthorse-Campbell donned in his war bonnet and buckskins and riding his horse home into the next world. 

Our Students’ Success is Our Wealth: Join Us to Help More Students Access Higher Education 

Our Students’ Success is Our Wealth: Join Us to Help More Students Access Higher Education 

Winter is a special season, full of holidays, good food, good company. And no matter the culture, storytelling and the spirit of reflection, growth, giving, and gratitude take center stage this time of year. It is no different for Native peoples, many of whom wait to tell certain stories on long, cold winter nights.