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Shanda Poitra
1,985
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Finalist1x
WinnerShanda Poitra
1,985
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Finalist1x
WinnerBio
Maandaamin Zeynibahn Ikwe Indizhinekaus, Migizi Doodem, Mikinak Wajing Doongee. My name is Corn Silk Woman, Eagle Clan, I am Anishinaabe/Ojibwe from the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa. My government name is Shanda Poitra.
I am the Founder, Executive Director & Lead Instructor for Turtle Mountain IMPACT: Empowerment Self-Defense. We are an abuse and violence prevention nonprofit for the state of North Dakota and the first chapter created for indigenous communities and led by indigenous people.
I have represented by tribal community and program at various conferences throughout the nation, such as GONA Conference - Gathering of Native Americans, Keeping the Homefires Burning conference - Seventh Generation, NSAC - National Sexual Assault Conference, and Heart of Her Nation - Thriving Women, Seventh Generation.
I have also been nominated as the Empowered Woman for the Tory Burch Foundation, and interviewed by NPR, Sirius Radio, House of the Moon, and was recently awarded the Bush Fellowship.
Education
Turtle Mountain Community College
Bachelor's degree programMajors:
- Finance and Financial Management Services
- Business Administration, Management and Operations
- Business, Management, Marketing, and Related Support Services, Other
Northland Community and Technical College
Associate's degree programMajors:
- Science Technologies/Technicians, Other
Miscellaneous
Desired degree level:
Bachelor's degree program
Graduate schools of interest:
Transfer schools of interest:
Majors of interest:
- Business, Management, Marketing, and Related Support Services, Other
- Business Administration, Management and Operations
Career
Dream career field:
Non-Profit Organization Management
Dream career goals:
Non-Profit Leadership & Management
Surgical Technologist, Certified Instrument Specialist, Central Tech, CPI (Crisis Prevention Intervention) Instructor
Various hospitals throughout North Dakota and Minnesota; currently employed (leaving Aug 2023) at Indian Health Service, Belcourt ND.2009 – Present15 yearsExecutive Director & Lead Instructor
Turtle Mountain IMPACT: Empowerment Self-Defense2015 – Present9 years
Sports
Roller Derby
Club2010 – 20144 years
Awards
- Queen of the Rink, and various MVP awards following bouts.
Research
Community Organization and Advocacy
Turtle Mountain IMPACT: Empowerment Self-Defense — Executive Director & Lead Instructor2015 – Present
Public services
Advocacy
Turtle Mountain IMPACT: Empowerment Self-Defense — Director, organize, speak, manage operations, etc.2021 – 2023
Little Miami Brewing Native American Scholarship Award
Boozhoo! Mandaamin Zenibaahn Ikwe indizhinekaaz, Migizi Doodem, Mikinaak Wajiw Doonjii. Hello! My name is Corn Silk Woman, I am Eagle Clan, I’m Ojibwe from the Turtle Mountains. My English name is Shanda Lynn Poitra. I was born and raised on the Turtle Mountain Reservation in Belcourt, ND. I’m currently employed as a surgical technologist for IHS in Belcourt, and I’m also the Founder & Executive Director for Turtle Mountain IMPACT, a grassroots organization that is dedicated to teaching physical & verbal self-defense skills to indigenous communities. IMPACT is an international organization with chapters across the globe, and I’m very proud to say that Turtle Mountain IMPACT is the first chapter created and led by all indigenous people AND taught on tribal sovereign land! Woo!
So far, I’m learning how to manage this program as I go. I’m new to business management, but I do know that this work in teaching others how to resist violence and heal from trauma is much needed in our community. The fact that an organization called Missing & Murdered Indigenous Women exists is enough to prove that empowerment self-defense for our people is necessary. Empowering our indigenous people should be as common as knowing how to perform CPR. I feel a strong responsibility to share my teachings with others in my community because it saved my life, it could help others as well.
Truth is, I know what it feels like to be on both sides of empowerment. I know the fear, pain, and humiliation that comes with domestic violence & sexual assault, yet I also know what it feels like to step out of that proverbial cage. To breathe freely. To speak freely. To walk the earth in a good and healthy way. I wish this freedom and empowerment for every indigenous being, especially for those in my own community. Witnessing the strength and transformation our participants experience during our workshops is overwhelming and makes all of this hard work worth it; we get to see them TAKE their power back from those who hurt them. I hope to continue this work for the rest of my life.
My goal is to leave my job at the hospital and pursue this self-defense program full-time. My life experience and previous leadership experiences have prepared me to lead abuse prevention and survivor healing in Indian Country. Today, I’m a nationally recognized leader who has officially created the first IMPACT Chapter for Indigenous communities; I was chosen by the Tory Burch Foundation’s Empowered Women initiative and have been interviewed by NPR, Upworthy, and Sirius Radio. I was awarded the 2023 Bush Fellowship, and I’ve taught self-defense workshops for indigenous employees of House of the Moon, and Google.
I acknowledge the fact that I need more skills for TM IMPACT to be sustainable. The first skill set I need is nonprofit management and administration. I have passion and a vision, but I need practical skills to turn that vision into sustainable work. This includes financial management, grant proposal writing, fundraising, budgeting, and the unique realities of founding a nonprofit organization on a reservation. This bachelor's program is ideal for teaching me the skills I'll need to manage Turtle Mountain IMPACT and keep this initiative going for the long haul.
Please consider my application for the Little Miami Brewing Native American Scholarship. I’m excited and ready to make this transition in my life and I would be a solid candidate. Chi miigwech (big thank you) for your time.
Connie Konatsotis Scholarship
Boozhoo! Mandaamin Zenibaahn Ikwe indizhinekaaz, Migizi Doodem, Mikinaak Wajiw Doonjii. Hello! My name is Corn Silk Woman, I am Eagle Clan, I’m from the Turtle Mountains. My English name is Shanda Lynn Poitra. I was born and raised on the Turtle Mountain Reservation in Belcourt, ND. I’m currently employed as a surgical technologist for IHS in Belcourt, and I’m also the Founder & Executive Director for Turtle Mountain IMPACT, a grassroots organization that is dedicated to teaching physical & verbal self-defense skills to indigenous communities. IMPACT is an international organization with chapters across the globe, and I’m very proud to say that Turtle Mountain IMPACT is the first chapter created and led by all indigenous people AND taught on tribal sovereign land! Woo!
So far, I’m learning how to manage this program as I go. I’m new to business management, but I do know that this work in teaching others how to resist violence and heal from trauma is much needed in our community. The fact that an organization called Missing & Murdered Indigenous Women exists is enough to prove that empowerment self-defense for our people is necessary. Empowering our indigenous people should be as common as knowing how to perform CPR. I feel a strong responsibility to share my teachings with others in my community because it saved my life, it could help others as well.
Truth is, I know what it feels like to be on both sides of empowerment. I know the fear, pain, and humiliation that comes with domestic violence & sexual assault, yet I also know what it feels like to step out of that proverbial cage. To breathe freely. To speak freely. To walk the earth in a good and healthy way. I wish this freedom and empowerment for every indigenous being, especially for those in my own community. Witnessing the strength and transformation our participants experience during our workshops is overwhelming and makes all of this hard work worth it; we get to see them TAKE their power back from those who hurt them. I hope to continue this work for the rest of my life.
My goal is to leave my job at the hospital and pursue this self-defense program full-time. My life experience and previous leadership experiences have prepared me to lead abuse prevention and survivor healing in Indian Country. Today, I’m a nationally recognized leader who has officially created the first IMPACT Chapter for Indigenous communities; I was chosen by the Tory Burch Foundation’s Empowered Women initiative and have been interviewed by NPR, Upworthy, and Sirius Radio. I was awarded the 2023 Bush Fellowship, and I’ve taught self-defense workshops for indigenous employees of House of the Moon, and Google.
I acknowledge the fact that I need more skills for TM IMPACT to be sustainable. The first skill set I need is nonprofit management and administration. I have passion and a vision, but I need practical skills to turn that vision into sustainable work. This includes financial management, grant proposal writing, fundraising, budgeting, and the unique realities of founding a nonprofit organization on a reservation. This bachelor's program is ideal for teaching me the skills I'll need to manage Turtle Mountain IMPACT and keep this initiative going for the long haul.
Please consider my application for the Connie Konatsotis Scholarship. I’m excited and ready to make this transition in my life and I would be a solid candidate. Chi miigwech for your time.
Advancement of Minorities in Finance Scholarship
Boozhoo! Mandaamin Zenibaahn Ikwe indizhinekaaz, Migizi Doodem, Mikinaak Wajiw Doonjii. Hello! My name is Corn Silk Woman, I am Eagle Clan, I’m from the Turtle Mountains. My English name is Shanda Lynn Poitra. I was born and raised on the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians Reservation in Belcourt, ND. I’m currently employed as a surgical technologist for Indian Health Service (IHS) in Belcourt, and I’m also the Founder & Executive Director for Turtle Mountain IMPACT, a grassroots organization that is dedicated to teaching physical & verbal self-defense skills to indigenous communities. IMPACT is an international organization with chapters across the globe, and I’m very proud to say that Turtle Mountain IMPACT is the first chapter created and led by all indigenous people AND taught on tribal sovereign land! Woo!
So far, I’m learning how to manage this program as I go. I’m new to business management, but I do know that this work in teaching others how to resist violence and heal from trauma is much needed in our community. The fact that an organization called Missing & Murdered Indigenous Women exists is enough to prove that empowerment self-defense for our people is necessary. Empowering our indigenous people should be as common as knowing how to perform CPR. I feel a strong responsibility to share my teachings with others in my community because it saved my life, it could help others as well.
Truth is, I know what it feels like to be on both sides of empowerment. I grew up with the mentality that domestic violence is a normal way of life. Every woman I knew growing up were abused one way or another. Unfortunately, that was a cycle that I repeated. I know the fear, pain, and humiliation that comes with domestic violence & sexual assault, yet I also know what it feels like to step out of that proverbial cage. To breathe freely. To speak freely. To walk the earth in a good and healthy way. I wish this freedom and empowerment for every indigenous being, especially for those in my own community. Witnessing the strength and transformation our participants experience during our workshops is overwhelming and makes all this hard work worth it; we get to see them TAKE their power back from those who hurt them.
My goal is to leave my job at the hospital and pursue this self-defense program full-time. My life experience and previous leadership experiences have prepared me to lead abuse prevention and survivor healing in Indian Country. Today, I’m a nationally recognized leader who has officially created the first IMPACT Chapter for Indigenous communities; I was chosen by the Tory Burch Foundation’s Empowered Women initiative and have been interviewed by NPR, Upworthy, and Sirius Radio. I was awarded the 2023 Bush Fellowship, and I’ve taught self-defense workshops for indigenous employees of House of the Moon, and Google.
I acknowledge the fact that I need more skills for TM IMPACT to be sustainable. The first skill set I need is nonprofit management and administration. I have passion and a vision, but I need practical skills to turn that vision into sustainable work. This includes financial management, grant proposal writing, fundraising, budgeting, and the unique realities of founding a nonprofit organization on a reservation. This bachelor's program is ideal for teaching me the skills I'll need to manage Turtle Mountain IMPACT and keep this initiative going for the long haul.
Please consider my application. I’m excited and ready to make this transition in my life and I would be a solid candidate. Chi miigwech (big thank you) for your time.
Jorian Kuran Harris (Shugg) Helping Heart Foundation Scholarship
Boozhoo! Mandaamin Zenibaahn Ikwe indizhinekaaz, Migizi Doodem, Mikinaak Wajiw Doonjii. Hello! My name is Corn Silk Woman, I am Eagle Clan, I’m from the Turtle Mountains. My English name is Shanda Lynn Poitra. I was born and raised on the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa Indians Reservation in Belcourt, ND. I’m currently employed as a surgical technologist for Indian Health Service (IHS) in Belcourt, and I’m also the Founder & Executive Director for Turtle Mountain IMPACT, a grassroots organization that is dedicated to teaching physical & verbal self-defense skills to indigenous communities. IMPACT is an international organization with chapters across the globe, and I’m very proud to say that Turtle Mountain IMPACT is the first chapter created and led by all indigenous people AND taught on tribal sovereign land! Woo!
So far, I’m learning how to manage this program as I go. I’m new to business management, but I do know that this work in teaching others how to resist violence and heal from trauma is much needed in our community. The fact that an organization called Missing & Murdered Indigenous Women exists is enough to prove that empowerment self-defense for our people is necessary. Empowering our indigenous people should be as common as knowing how to perform CPR. I feel a strong responsibility to share my teachings with others in my community because it saved my life, it could help others as well.
Truth is, I know what it feels like to be on both sides of empowerment. I know the fear, pain, and humiliation that comes with domestic violence & sexual assault, yet I also know what it feels like to step out of that proverbial cage. To breathe freely. To speak freely. To walk the earth in a good and healthy way. I wish this freedom and empowerment for every indigenous being, especially for those in my own community. Witnessing the strength and transformation our participants experience during our workshops is overwhelming and makes all this hard work worth it; we get to see them TAKE their power back from those who hurt them.
My goal is to leave my job at the hospital and pursue this self-defense program full-time. My life experience and previous leadership experiences have prepared me to lead abuse prevention and survivor healing in Indian Country. Today, I’m a nationally recognized leader who has officially created the first IMPACT Chapter for Indigenous communities; I was chosen by the Tory Burch Foundation’s Empowered Women initiative and have been interviewed by NPR, Upworthy, and Sirius Radio. I was awarded the 2023 Bush Fellowship, and I’ve taught self-defense workshops for indigenous employees of House of the Moon, and Google.
I acknowledge the fact that I need more skills for TM IMPACT to be sustainable. The first skill set I need is nonprofit management and administration. I have passion and a vision, but I need practical skills to turn that vision into sustainable work. This includes financial management, grant proposal writing, fundraising, budgeting, and the unique realities of founding a nonprofit organization on a reservation. This bachelor's program is ideal for teaching me the skills I'll need to manage Turtle Mountain IMPACT and keep this initiative going for the long haul.
Please consider my application. I’m excited and ready to make this transition in my life and I would be a solid candidate. Chi miigwech (big thank you) for your time.
WCEJ Thornton Foundation Low-Income Scholarship
WinnerMaandaamin Zeynibahn Ikwe Indizhinekaus, Migizi Doodem, Mikinak Wajing Doongee. My name is Corn Silk Woman, Eagle Clan, Anishinaabe/Ojibwe from the Turtle Mountains. My government name is Shanda Poitra.
While employed full-time, I am also the founder, executive director, and lead instructor for Turtle Mountain IMPACT; formerly known as Turtle Mountain Empowerment Self Defense, established in 2018. We are now a non-profit for the state of ND and the first official chapter of IMPACT International - created for Indigenous communities and led by Indigenous people.
Turtle Mountain IMPACT is a chapter of the IMPACT International organization and is comprised o female lead instructors (the “vigil-aunties”), and male suit instructors (who portray the “bad” or “suspicious” characters, wear fully padded suits, and take full-force physical strikes from participants).
Our workshops are now requested on reservations all over the country and in Canada. We can hardly keep up due to my instructors also having full-time jobs, college courses, and kids at home; but we manage. We all share the same passion and dedication to this work because we have witnessed firsthand how important and life-changing it can be for those who take our workshops.
Self-defense training is one of the few types of victim services that simultaneously promotes body-oriented healing and practical safety planning strategies. Feminist empowerment approaches to self-defense go well beyond physical skills. These programs teach assertive communication and boundary-setting skills, conflict resolution and de-escalation, and strategic physical escape from potentially dangerous situations. Research shows that survivors who are taught physical and verbal skills as part of feminist self-defense skills report finding their voices, speaking up for themselves, and ending relationships with abusive and coercive people due to increased confidence in their ability to take care of themselves.
When I returned home, I noticed an increase in crime; mostly against women & girls, or vulnerable people. Every time this topic was brought up to a group of people, there were always more stories and injustices that were added on. I remembered the self-defense course that I took while attending the University of North Dakota, called IMPACT-U; this one-credit course changed my life forever. I was able to recognize the horrible conditions that my children and I were living in, leave my abuser, and live my life with more confidence than I’ve ever had. After discussing the issues with a former instructor, it was established that I would do instructor training and bring these skills back to our community myself. I had no idea how much work it was going to take to get this going, but I was determined.
I have spent the last five years working to make this method of healing and safety planning available to others on the reservation. Turtle Mountain IMPACT (Empowerment Self-Defense) has taught basic skills to so many of all ages. Additionally, we partnered with IMPACT Boston, a program of Triangle, Inc., to bring more rigorous self-defense courses to the reservation in June 2018. Through this collaboration, my team worked with IMPACT Boston trainers to create a customized curriculum that addresses the unique realities facing indigenous women, girls, Two-Spirit, and people with disabilities of all genders.
Our biggest accomplishments were obtaining our chapter status while training, organizing, and teaching workshops, WHILE maintaining our full-time obligations with employers, school requirements, and family & ceremony life. The desired impact of this project is that Tribe members will be able to access healing programs without having to self-identify as victims of crime. Since there is a stigma in reporting to law enforcement or accessing victim services, this project will present an alternative way for Tribe members experiencing abuse to get the healing and practical safety skills they need.
Self-defense programs will be offered in the school systems, including college, and community gathering spaces that are adjacent to the lowest-income housing on the reservation. By offering programs in these spaces, and advertising them as open to all women, teen girls, two-spirit or students receiving special education, survivors can access support in neutral locations that they go to as part of regular routines. Turtle Mountain IMPACT will offer programs in special education classrooms, during afterschool program time at the high school, and on weekends and evenings to reach adult women.
We also created boundary-setting exercises based on the cultural norms of the community and the unique experiences of violence women and children experience. Safety planning strategies were developed for racially motivated hate violence, abduction, sexual assault, child sexual abuse, sexual harassment in medical settings, and domestic violence.
Beyond The C.L.O.U.D Scholarship
Maandaamin Zeynibahn Ikwe Indizhinekaus, Migizi Doodem, Mikinak Wajing Doongee. My name is Corn Silk Woman, Eagle Clan, I am Anishinaabe/Ojibwe from the Turtle Mountain Band of Chippewa. My government name is Shanda Poitra. I am the Executive Director & Lead Instructor for Turtle Mountain IMPACT: Empowerment Self-Defense, and a Surgical Technologist for the Indian Health Service.
I was born and raised on the TM reservation. I left for college in 2005 and returned home in 2015 with a degree in surgical technology and began working for our Indian Health Service in Belcourt, ND. I've been in the surgical field for 14 years now and have worked at hospitals throughout North Dakota. While employed full-time, I founded Turtle Mountain IMPACT: Empowerment Self-Defense, an official chapter of IMPACT International. We are now a nonprofit for the state of North Dakota and the first chapter was created for indigenous communities and led by indigenous people.
I am prepared to end my career as a surgical technologist with the Indian Health Service in 2023 to pursue a bachelor's degree in Leadership and Management and continue to serve Indian Country by providing an effective and culturally relevant abuse prevention program. Just like I've been doing while working full-time at the hospital, I'll continue to direct, organize, and teach for Turtle Mountain IMPACT; along with attending the necessary training, meetings, and informative conferences that will assist my program.
I strongly feel like now is the perfect time for me to pursue transformational growth through academics because I'm ready for new challenges. After several years of training, teaching, and revising a self-defense curriculum that works, my passion and dedication have led me to a point where I would like my program to become independent of our fiscal sponsor, IMPACT Boston. I acknowledge that for this to become possible, I would need to learn and develop the skills to sustain a business.
To realize my vision, I need the skills to manage and sustain a nonprofit organization. My plan will involve training courses on nonprofit management and fundraising from recognized national leaders. This bachelor's degree in Ogimaawiwin (Leadership) & Management will give me the skills I need to build a thriving abuse and violence prevention organization in a rural tribal community, while also building a foundation that would support traveling to other tribal nations to teach empowerment self-defense.
This bachelor's program focuses on leadership and management in tribal communities, so I would also be attending courses like Tribal Government, Elements of Economics & Tribal Economic Development, Sociology of Indian Reservations, and Anishinaabe Cultural Involvement. This program also includes other courses that would be beneficial, like Business Law, Grant Writing, Finance, Human Resource Management, etc.
My vision is to create and sustain an abuse prevention and trauma healing program for Indian Country. Well, I already have, now I just want to be a quality Executive Director and sustain this program independently.
I believe I deserve this scholarship because I am experienced in teaching empowerment to women and girls in indigenous communities. Our tribal people have been disadvantaged for decades due to genocide and colonization, which resulted in a ripple effect of despair. I grew up thinking that toxic relationships are a normal part of life because that's what I witnessed; it all stems from elders who lost their way during the boarding school era. I'm reminding our indigenous women and girls of the power and strength they have inside of them and teaching them how to bring that out by using their voices, setting boundaries, advocating for themselves, and recognizing violence & abuse. This will be my legacy.