Rochelle Ripley and her nonprofit, hawkwing, provide healthcare and education opportunities to the Lakota people in South Dakota.
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The Cheyenne River Sioux Reservation is located in an isolated area of South Dakota -- a three-hour drive from the nearest large city. Poverty runs rampant on the reservation. So does unemployment, alcoholism and diabetes.
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"The spirit of the people, it's alive," said Ripley, whose group works alongside the tribe.
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Ripley's efforts started with the group providing holiday boxes to every child on the reservation, about 2,600, she said. They all get new clothes, toys, books, personal care products and school supplies. "It was to form and build relationships. We continue that to this day."
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Four to five times a year, Ripley makes the trip from her home in Connecticut to the Cheyenne River Reservation. To date, her nonprofit has delivered an estimated $9 million in services and goods to the Lakota people.
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When Ripley was young and visiting her grandmother's farm in Indiana, her grandmother told Rochelle stories about her Native American heritage and asked that Rochelle one day go and help the Lakota people.
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Ripley and volunteers help run a food bank and provide free health services, home renovations and educational opportunities.
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Ripley: "We're all children of this earth, and we need to work together so that everyone has a chance at having a decent life.
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The tribe calls her "Wa Okiye Winyan," which roughly means woman who is helping people.