Environmentalist, economist and writer Winona LaDuke was born in Los Angeles in 1959. She specialises in rural development and issues surrounding land, food and sustainable farming are central to her advocacy.

While her mother was of European Jewish ancestry, her father was a Native American from the Gaa-waabaabiganikaag reservation in Minnesota, also known as the White Earth Indian Reservation. Gaa-waabaabiganikaag is home to a group of indigenous people – the Ojibwe nation. Because of her father’s ancestry, LaDuke was part of the Ojibwe from an early age. However, she was raised between Los Angeles and Oregon, and did not live on White Earth or any other reservation until later in her life.

Influenced by her father’s advocacy for the Ojibwe people, activism informed LaDuke’s childhood and at 18, she became the youngest person to speak to the United Nations about American Indian concerns. And then, while studying economics at Harvard in the late seventies, LaDuke came into contact with a new generation of activists. She was invited to join a group of Native Americans students who campaigned against racism and discrimination on campus and beyond. For the first time, she found a sense of belonging among people who, like her, straddled two worlds: the native one, which had featured throughout her childhood in families and birthdays spent on reservations, and the new world of elite universities that had just started opening their doors more widely to non-white, non-Christian students.

Her meeting Jimmie Durham, an artist and activist who claims to be of Cherokee descent, was significant to LaDuke in her politicisation. Durham, as a member of the International Treaty Council, concerned himself with promises made by the government to indigenous people, and made LaDuke realise that the problems afflicting native nations were not endemic to the people but the result of centuries of governmental exploitation, abuse and poor policies. This understanding changed LaDuke’s approach to her advocacy.

After graduation, LaDuke moved to the White Earth reservation. She started working as the high school’s principal while completing a long-distance MA in Community Economic Development. Despite not knowing the Ojibwe language and initially struggling to gain the trust of the community, she soon became involved with a lawsuit to recover lands promised by an 1867 federal treaty to the Anishinaabeg people (a group which comprises several groups of indigenous peoples across the United States and Canada).

When, in 1989, the lawsuit was dismissed, LaDuke founded White Earth Land Recovery Project, which focuses on the recovery, preservation and restoration of both land and traditional practices, with the aim to strengthen spiritual and cultural heritage of the Anishinaabeg people. She was executive director for twenty-five years. To this day, the project secured the return of 1,400 acres of land stolen from native people.

Underpinning much of LaDuke’s work is the belief in the Anishinaabe prophecy that their people are living through an age which asks them to choose whether to continue treading on “the scorched path” they have thus far pursued, or, conversely, choosing “the green path”. For LaDuke, the green path looks like a post-petroleum, land-based economy which has moved on from fossil fuels and plastic, and instead focuses on an harmonious intergenerational and interspecies co-existence. With this in mind, in 1985 LaDuke also founded the Indigenous Women’s Network, which focuses on giving visibility and empowering indigenous women to participate in political, social and cultural change.

In 1993, together with folk music duo the Indigo Girls, LaDuke founded Honor the Earth, a project which aims, through the use of the arts, media and “indigenous wisdom”, to raise awareness of native environmental issues, thus helping native communities to survive. She became executive director of Honor the Earth and worked on a national level to create public support and funding for native environmental groups.

In the late 1990s, LaDuke started farming on White Earth and other tribal land. In the last twenty years, part of her work has focused on campaigning against the introduction of genetically modified rice on native land, as well on the construction of several pipelines. She was an important coordinator at Standing Rock, where in 2017, the Sioux Tribe and supporters fought to protect the tribe’s drinking water and ancestral lands from the Dakota Access pipeline.

LaDuke is also a two-time vice-presidential candidate, having joined Ralph Nader on the Green Party ticket in 1996 and 2000. In 2016, she became the first Native American woman to receive an Electoral College vote for vice president.

An indefatigable activist, farmer, author and public speaker, LaDuke has received several awards throughout her career including the Ann Bancroft Award for Women’s Leadership Fellowship and the Reebok Human Rights Award. In 1994, she was nominated by TIME magazine as one of America’s most promising leaders under forty. As of early November 2017, she is raising funds to buy land on which she aims to create a hemp and heritage food farm in order to create local wealth and train young people in farming indigenous food.

©The Heroine Collective 2016 – Present, All Rights Reserved. Every effort is made to ensure our articles are as accurate as they can possibly can be, but if you notice a factual error, please do be in touch. We only use images we believe are either in the public domain or images we believe we are able to use for illustrative, editorial and non-commercial purposes. If you believe one of our images is being used incorrectly, please be in touch. References include: Johansen, Bruce E. Encyclopaedia of the American Indian Movement. Santa Barbara, California: Greenwood. 2013. Silverstone, Michael. Winona LaDuke: Restoring Land and Culture in Native America. New York: The Feminist Press at The City University of New York. 2001. https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/winonashemp/winonas-hemp-and-heritage-farm. http://www.honorearth.org/about. https://hub.jhu.edu/2017/11/01/winona-laduke-jhu-race-forums/. http://welrp.org/. https://www.womenofthehall.org/inductee/winona-laduke/. https://www.winonaladuke.com/press/. http://beta.latimes.com/nation/la-na-faith-spotted-eagle-2016-story.html