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Obama initiative vows to help native youth

Chairman of the Standing Rock Sioux Tribe David Archambault II and President Barack Obama watch American Indian dance during a visit to the Standing Rock Indian Reservation in Cannon Ball, N.D. Obama on Wednesday announced an initiative to improve conditions and opportunities for American Indian youth.

WASHINGTON – Pledging to fulfill a “sacred responsibility,” President Barack Obama unveiled an initiative Wednesday aimed at creating opportunities and improving dire conditions for American Indian youth, more than a third of whom live in poverty.

Obama’s Generation Indigenous initiative calls for programs focused on better preparing young American Indians for college and careers, and developing leadership skills through the Department of Education and the Aspen Institute’s Center for Native American Youth. Members of the president’s staff also plan to visit reservations next year.

“Nothing gets me angrier than when I get a sense that our young people early in life are already feeling like opportunities are foreclosed to them,” Obama said. “Because that’s not who we are.”

The White House did not provide a cost estimate for the initiative, but a spokeswoman said the administration plans to fund it with existing money and the help of nonprofit and philanthropic organizations.

The announcement, made as part of the White House Tribal Nations Conference that Obama hosted Wednesday, comes five months after the president and his wife visited the impoverished Standing Rock Indian Reservation in the Dakotas.

The 3,600-square-mile reservation is home to about 8,500 people, many of whom live in run-down homes and where the unemployment rate runs as high as 20 percent. The suicide rate for American Indians aged 15 to 24 is more than twice the national rate.

Vice President Joe Biden said in a morning appearance before the conference that for Obama, helping Indian youth is “something that he came back from his June visit fired up about doing something about.”

“We walked away shaken, because some of these kids were carrying burdens no young person should have to carry, and it was heartbreaking,” Obama said.

Wednesday’s conference involved leaders from 566 federally recognized tribal nations, along with 36 White House Youth Ambassadors chosen from around the country through an essay contest.

“People who grow up in a poverty culture sometimes need guidance, need values, need a little bit of structure,” said Chase Iron Eyes, an attorney and Native American rights activist from Standing Rock who is at the conference.

“Through some of the things the administration is doing, it looks like they’re trying to do that,” he said. “Youth – they just need the right tools, and maybe they can empower themselves.”



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