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University Of Missouri-St. Louis Faculty And Staff Bring Volunteers To The Cheyenne River Youth Project's RedCan Graffiti Jam

Two former Indian Health Services buildings sat neglected on the Cheyenne River Sioux Reservation in Eagle Butte, South Dakota for years.

July 26, 2021

Two former Indian Health Services buildings sat neglected on the Cheyenne River Sioux Reservation in Eagle Butte, South Dakota for years.

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They had become dilapidated – the exteriors in varying states of disrepair – until they found new life this summer during the Cheyenne River Youth Project’s annual RedCan Grafitti Jam. Over the course of four days, indigenous artists and community members transformed them.

The centerpiece is a wall-sized mural that reads, “Mitákuye Oyás’in.” The Lakota phrase means “all my relations” and reflects the world’s interconnectedness. It was accompanied by imagery including a buffalo, eagle and other symbols meaningful to the Lakota people with colors spanning the rainbow.

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“That says for everybody who passes through the main street of this reservation to the tribal headquarters of this reservation that ‘we are all related,’” Dana Klar said. “It’s just gorgeous.”

Klar, an enrolled tribal member of the United Houma Nation and assistant teaching professor of child advocacy studies at the University of Missouri–St. Louis, was there to see the mural go up earlier this July. The Cheyenne River Sioux Reservation has become something of a second home for Klar who has journeyed there each summer since 2013 to volunteer with the Cheyenne River Youth Project (CRYP).

For the past three years, Klar, the UMSL team leader, has volunteered during RedCan with a variety of UMSL community members. This year, she brought five students, three alumni and five applied psychology in child advocacy studies faculty and staff members and family, including a few children, to volunteer from July 3-11, assisting artists, providing children’s programming and serving community meals.

“I did not know what to expect when I signed up for the trip,” said Emily Kersten, a senior psychology major who volunteered. “We came to the Cheyenne Sioux Reservation ready to work with the community and be there for whatever they needed during the week of the RedCan Graffiti Jam. We worked really hard providing meals and art activities for the children, and I’m incredibly proud of the UMSL team and all the work we accomplished.”

Financial and logistical support for the trip came from Thrivent, a Lutheran ministry, and the UMSL community. Thrivent provided two generous grants while UMSL faculty and staff members helped find transportation and contributed individual donations.

A student brought the CRYP to Klar’s attention around 2012 while she was teaching at Lindenwood University. The student had just returned from volunteering on the reservation with a St. Louis non-profit organization called Saints With A Mission Purpose-Indian Nations (SWAMP-IN) and also saw Klar’s passion for indigenous issues in the classroom during a human diversity course.

Klar then contacted Debbie Wills, a SWAMP-IN leader who had been taking teams to CRYP for at least seven years, about getting involved with the CRYP. Wills happened to be hosting a young man from Cheyenne River Sioux Reservation at the time. One meeting was all it took to spark the now longstanding partnership.

“He wanted to come to St. Louis to give back because of the flooding,” Klar said of the visiting tribal member. “We had just been through a major flood, so he said, ‘You guys always come up to serve us. Now it’s my turn. There are some of us that want to come help you.’ I already felt a big connection, and I’m like, ‘Yeah I want to go.’”

For several years, Klar would take a team for a week at a time to work at the CRYP. They would do anything needed – housekeeping, cooking, gardening, yard work and leading kids’ activities – for the nonprofit youth project.

The CRYP was originally founded in 1988 by Julie Garreau to address the community’s needs for services to support struggling children and their families. The story of its founding and continued success is an inspiration to many, including Klar.

“She wanted something for kids to do after school, so she went to tribal council and asked them to give her a bar that shut down,” she said. “It was called the Old Brown Jug, I believe, and she said, ‘Just give me a building, and I will start after-school activities for youth.’”

The former bar became colloquially known as, “The Main,” because of its location on Main Street, and despite its modest means, the center was always packed with local children. The CRYP has continued to expand over the years, building two new youth centers and an art park. Klar has seen the growth firsthand, and children still flock to the new buildings nearly every day.

In 2015, the CRYP launched RedCan – an invitational graffiti festival where indigenous artists and visiting artists from around the world convene to spray paint murals throughout the community. The emphasis on graffiti as an art form and the graffiti subculture has given young Lakota people a creative voice and has also served as a way to strengthen their connections to Lakota culture and heritage.

Klar heard about RedCan on previous trips, but only started volunteering for it specifically three years ago when Garreau suggested UMSL would be a good fit for the event. She and her teams of UMSL volunteers have already left a mark on RedCan.

“The first time I was there, though, I was shocked because the kids kept showing up at the building that we stay in and there were no specific activities for them,” Klar said. “We asked the second year if we could add in some kids activities. That was 2019, and they really liked it. UMSL co-team leader, Dr. Jerry Dunn, has led in coordinating several art project offerings both years.”


This press release was produced by the University of Missouri-St. Louis. The views expressed here are the author’s own.

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