Kalliopeia Foundation Grants American Indian College Fund $80,000

Dec 7, 2010 | Blog

Kalliopeia Foundation Grants American Indian College Fund $80,000

December 7, 2010

December 7, 2010, Denver, Colo.— The Kalliopeia Foundation has announced it is granting the American Indian College Fund $80,000 over a period of two years, with $30,000 for scholarships each year plus $10,000 for operating support per year. A supporter of the Fund since 2004, the foundation has focused on providing scholarships for tribal college students pursuing a teaching degree with the intent to serve as American Indian language instructors.

Barbara Cushing, Director of Grantmaking for Kalliopeia Foundation, said, “We support American Indian College Fund’s programs that support students pursuing a teaching degree with the intent to preserve Native language. Languages are the depositories for indigenous wisdom, and Native peoples can help us find solutions to the problems facing us through a more holistic approach to life. The preservation and revitalization of Native American languages is integral to that strategy.”

Richard B. Williams, President and CEO of the American Indian College Fund, said, “We are delighted that The Kalliopeia Foundation is renewing its support to ensure the continuation of American Indian culture and language through education. The Kalliopeia Foundation is improving the lives of American Indian students and providing hope throughout Indian Country, and thereby enriching our nation.”

About the Kalliopeia Foundation
The Kalliopeia Foundation is a private grantmaking foundation that contributes to the evolution of communities and cultures that honor the unity at the heart of life’s rich diversity. Through its grantmaking it seeks to strengthen a collective recognition of the oneness of humanity.

Share This Blog

Recent Blog Posts

Democracy is Something That Makes Us Heard and Part of a Community

Democracy is Something That Makes Us Heard and Part of a Community

In this student perspective, a Nebraska Indian Community College scholar explores how Indigenous governance systems have long practiced democratic principles, from the Iroquois Confederacy’s Great Law of Peace to tribal council decision-making today. The blog highlights how Native traditions of community voice, consensus-building, and shared responsibility continue to shape democracy and strengthen tribal communities.