by Tinhorn Consulting | Entrepreneurship, Women Warriors
It all began with an unplanned visit to the Smithsonian “Girlhood (It’s Complicated)” exhibit which commemorates women suffrage and how girls changed history in the five areas of education, work, health, news and politics, and fashion. Each milestone display spoke of opportunities for girls being delayed or absent in these five key areas until there was a breakthrough. Slowly, I began to connect the dots as to why Native women are paid only 57 cents for every dollar paid to White, Non-Hispanic men.
While there were Native American women included, there were only five pieces in the entire exhibit which consisted of hundreds. So, here is my #thisiswhatyoumissedsmithsonian list! Each lady featured has broken barriers in at least one of the five exhibit key areas and made their mark within and beyond Indian Country.
“Americans have claimed girls’ bodies as community property.”
Education
Lourdes “Lulu” Pereira. Photo by Ms/Mr. Indigenous ASU Committee on Facebook.
I first heard about Lulu, now Miss Indigenous at Arizona State University, when she was fighting gender and racial discrimination at her high school graduation. She was banned from attending graduation because she wanted to wear her tribal regalia to the ceremony. This reminded me of the “Girlhood” Smithsonian exhibit and how school dress code policies are targeted primarily towards girls. Restricting the expression of young girls’ clothing, especially when it promotes their cultures, takes away their independence and identity. Since then, Lulu has been instrumental in changing policies so that school graduation dress codes are more culturally inclusive first in her own school district and now state-wide. Her advocacy and activism in academic institutions reminds us that representation does matter. Follow her journey at the Mr. and Ms. Indigenous at ASU Facebook Page.
Inspired by Lulu?
If you’re interested in starting or returning to a college experience that is culturally grounded, Tohono O’odham Community College is now extending free tuition for all Native American students affiliated with federally recognized tribes.
Work
Featured Indigenous female disrupting work barriers: Kamia Begay (Diné) of Nizhoni Soaps
Kamia Begay. Photo by Nizhoni Soaps.
Currently 13 years old, Kamia is, to our knowledge, the youngest Native girl soap boss to own three brick and mortar stores spanning across the Arizona and New Mexico state lines. I first met Kamia at the American Indian Chamber of Commerce of AZ holiday luncheon. I remember her thanking me and the other entrepreneurs for being women she could look up to as Native women business owners. I am proud of her because she had the courage to open up her brick and mortar stores during the pandemic. Her story touched a special place in my heart, too, because she’s on this business journey with her mom. You can purchase Kamia’s skincare online at www.nizhonisoaps.com or at her three stores located in Farmington, NM; Albuquerque, NM, and Mesa, AZ.
Motivated to be a boss babe like Kamia?
Follow @NativeWomenLead to learn more about funding opportunities and to be in the know about the #EqualityCantWait Challenge!
Health
Featured Indigenous female disrupting health barrier: Sareya Taylor (White Mountain Apache and Diné)
Sareya Taylor.
Sareya was the Inaugural Youth Poet Laureate of Phoenix. I had the privilege of hearing her read some of her original pieces at the Heard Museum. Sareya’s warrior spirit came through as her poetic flow painted images of urban Native experiences with pride. I am inspired by Sareya’s activism and how she uses her words to bring light to silent issues that impact our communities like mental health.
Uplifted by Sareya?
Learn more about Sareya by watching the Eat, Learn, and Grow episode “Words Matter” https://youtu.be/MckpT3mnVGY
If you or someone you love is being affected by domestic violence or is in need of mental health support, please contact the Southwest Indigenous Women’s Coalition at www.SWIWC.org.
News + Politics
Featured Indigenous female disrupting news + politics barriers: Alyssa London (Tlingit)
Alyssa London. Photo by Tinhorn Consulting.
I first learned about Alyssa on social media as she was the first Alaskan Native to win the Miss Alaska Pageant. She was an interesting combo of Standford grad, former Microsoft employee, and Culture Story business owner. In other words, someone I’d like my little girl to know of as a fellow bi-racial Indigenous female breaking cycles. Call it “like attracting like” as I had the pleasure of getting to know Alyssa when she interviewed me at the Reservation Economic Summit and later cheering her on in person as she competed for the Miss USA Pageant in Las Vegas, NV. She stunned the audience in a beautiful red Tlingit designed gown during the evening gown competition. Alyssa would later replicate the full sized dress for Barbies which she gifted to my Zoey. Her children’s book “Journey of the Freckled Indian: A Tlingit Culture Story” resonates with my daughter and I as we are also biracial. Her work reminds us how important representation is, especially for young Native girls. You can listen to Alyssa on Native America Calling and catch her as an FNX TV show host.
Want to change the narrative like Alyssa?
Learn more about Alyssa by watching the Eat, Learn, and Grow episode “Taking Risks to Follow Your Dream” https://youtu.be/FNo0Rmzpdko
Fashion
Featured Indigenous female disrupting fashion barriers: Valentina Aragon (Diné) of ACONAV
Valentina Aragon. Photo by Dotlizhi.
The blended identities and cultures of Valentina and her husband Loren (Acoma Pueblo) make ACONAV what it is. Their high-end Indigenous fashion has been recognized and featured across Indian country and beyond. ACONAV has walked the Phoenix Fashion Week, won Phoenix Fashion Designer of the Year, and a custom design has even been commissioned by Disney! “Evoking the Empowerment” of women is a conscious choice which has ripple effects into our next generations. I’m also impressed by the notion of working with your partner and mother-in-law. The success they’ve achieved is a testament to the importance of healthy relationships and kinship.
Inspired to be a fashion disruptor like Valentina?
Shop couture or ready-to-wear styles at www.aconav.com.
“American citizenship is not always desired. As members of sovereign, independent nations, American Indian families raised girls to pass on their languages, values, and traditions. In response, U.S. educators physically removed girls and boys from their homes and communities. These educators wanted to erase Indian cultures. And, yet again, the key target was girls because Anglo educators also believed girls would raise the next generation.”
This topic made me pause and give thanks and appreciate all the grandmothers who came before us to fight for saf(er) spaces in education, work, wellness, politics, and fashion. We have a ways to go, but it continues with young women like this and sharing their stories. As a mother, that’s our responsibility, just like my mother did for me. We all came from a woman and must have respect for women. No matter your gender, the way we treat and support Native women impacts our present and future as we raise the next generation.
Inspired to take action towards wage equality?
- Buy Native
- Promote Indigenous Women in the Workforce
- See something, say something
- Mentor
- Listen
- Share this blog
Sources:
Smithsonian “Girlhood: It’s Complicated” Exhibit
https://www.si.edu/exhibitions/girlhood-its-complicated-event-exhib-6376
https://piper.asu.edu/nea-big-read/partners/lourdes-pereira
https://www.nizhonisoaps.com
https://youtu.be/MckpT3mnVGY
https://alyssalondon.com
https://youtu.be/FNo0Rmzpdko
https://www.aconav.com
—
by Tinhorn Consulting | Entrepreneurship, Training, Women Warriors
What an amazing year 2018 has been for Native women! I am proud to say that my daughter Zoey is growing up in a world with Native role models whom ARE Olympic gymnasts, computer scientists and elected U.S. Congresswomen. These accomplishments are a reality today for our Native people — and my daughter’s ambitions are not pie-in-the-sky dreams, they ARE achievable.
Everyday I encounter Native women transcending gender inequalities. By shattering the glass ceiling, they are introducing my daughter to a world of possibilities.
She could be an international award-winning architect like Wanda Dalla Costa of Redquill Architecture from the First Nations in Canada.
Or an economic empowerment thought leader like Vanessa Roanhorse of Roanhorse Consulting from the Navajo Nation.
These Native women ARE putting their own stamp in the world and making a difference for indigenous communities, which is a shared vision with Tinhorn Consulting, LLC.
From the local to national to international, in 2018 Tinhorn Consulting LLL was called upon to:
- Open doors for Native political candidates. By working with 7Gen Leaders, Tinhorn Consulting helped with brand identify and marketing collateral for the launch of this new organization that helps elect leaders that are making decisions that will have positive impacts on generations to come.
- Invest in Native Business women owners and entrepreneurs. Tinhorn Consulting LLC is at the forefront of initiatives like Project Dreamcatcher that offers free business training to Native women business owners; Tinhorn Consulting participated in an inaugural business summit of Native women business owners and leaders; and, collaborated with Cherylee Francis of Native Women Entrepreneurs of Arizona to present at a global trade summit in Mongolia, opening doors for Native businesses at an international level.
- Support the next generation of Native business leaders. Tinhorn Consulting proudly participated in educational events for UNITY, Arizona State University and others to encourage students interested in business and entrepreneurialism, providing helpful tips and experiences unique to Indian Country.
- Improve business leadership and management for tribal organizations. Organizations such as the Inter Tribal Council of Arizona’s Good Health and Wellness In Indian Country and the United Southern and Eastern Tribes (USET) sought Tinhorn Consulting’s training and facilitation expertise to address barriers impacting progress and communication.
- Make connections to and within Indian Country to address disparities. Tinhorn Consulting worked with the Arizona Community Foundation and tribal non-profit leaders to discuss strategies to increase participation of tribal communities in philanthropy; and, assisted Care1st to improve outreach and understanding of disparate health care needs and access in Indian Country.
2018 has been called the Year of the Woman; the same is true for Native women. This is my daughter’s world and I tell her everyday to do whatever makes her heart sing. With the positive Native role models around her, she and Native women everywhere ARE and WILL lead in political leadership, business, science and more.
by Tinhorn Consulting | Entrepreneurship, Women Warriors
Among Native cultures, women are celebrated as the core of family and community life. But what is known about women as entrepreneurs and the impact we have on the local, tribal and global economy?
It’s a fitting question as we come to the end of the 2018 National Small Business Week that began April 29th and ends May 5th.
Recent economic analyses indicate that women’s entrepreneurship is on the rise.* Native American/Alaska Native women-owned businesses are a significant part of this unrecognized economic engine. Over a 20-year period, Native women-owned business grew at substantial rates and contributed billions in revenues (see sidebar).
Other economic data suggests women are also more likely to invest their incomes back into their homes and communities, despite lower wages. It’s estimated that women reinvest 90 percent of their incomes in their families/communities, as compared to 30-40 percent for men. Also, while women perform 66 percent of the world’s work, the earn only 10 percent of world’s income (https://dreambuilder.org). In 2017, two-thirds of Native women were family bread winners, yet only earned 57 cents compared to $1 for white non-Hispanic men (http://nativewomenlead.org).
This is important and compelling information for all tribal communities, as business promoters and consumers. Even as entrepreneurship is growing, we can do more to achieve parity and help our communities address social ills. Whether you support the breakfast burrito lady, buy traditional clothing made by your sister or grandmother, or contract the woman-owned engineering firm, you have the power. Invest in Native women-owned businesses and they will invest back in you, our families/communities and the economy.
Key Trends about Native Women-owned Business (1997-2017):*
- Women engaged in entrepreneurship grew at an extraordinary rate of 114 percent over 20 years; that rate is more than four times higher – 467 percent – for women of color.
- Native women-owned businesses grew at a rate of 201 percent.
- Native American/Alaska Native women created 15 new business firms per day.
- As of 2017, Native women owned firms account for 1.4 percent of all women-owned businesses; an estimated 161,500 firms and employing more than 61,000 workers.
- As of 2017, Native women-owned firms generated an average of nearly $690,000 per firm and an overall $11 billion in revenues.
*Source: “The 2017 State of Women-owned Business Report.” Commissioned by American Express. Http://about.americanexpress.com/news/docs/2017-State-of-Women-Owned-Businesses-Report.pdf.
About Tinhorn Consulting, LLC:
Tinhorn Consulting, LLC is a full-service integrated marketing and communications firm specializing in telling clients’ stories in the most powerful way that has a lasting and far-reaching impact. Tinhorn Consulting, LLC works with clients from a variety of industry sectors, including health, government, education, nonprofit and business. Tinhorn Consulting LLC is a 100% Native American woman-owned business. For additional information, contact [email protected].
by Tinhorn Consulting | Women Warriors
Just this past Sunday (01.21.18), I purposefully participated in the Honoring Indigenous Women Leading The Women’s March to the Polls in downtown Phoenix. I took my five-year old daughter, Zoey because I wanted her to see all of the strong women standing up for gender equality. I explained to Zoey that women are still not treated the same as men and that the women at the march are speaking up to promote change.
Even as I teach my daughter to believe in herself and draw strength from her Hualapai, Navajo, Hopi, and Chinese heritage, I recognize the struggles we as women still face and those our mothers, grandmothers and generations before them faced in their lives.
Today Zoey has a choice to become whatever she wants to be. Even I have been able to reinvent myself from a computer scientist to a woman business owner. These choices were not available to my mother and grandmother. They had to work in the few accepted fields for women, had less educational opportunities and married young since that was the societal expectation.
As much as I hope that with all the struggles our ancestors faced, and women today, that society is moving closer to equality, that we could live in a world where we are treated as people, I recognize the obstacles still ahead of us. I’m reminded of my aunt Eileen, who comforted me during a moment of fear. She assured me of the strength I had within, that I came from a long line of warrior women. “It’s in your blood, in your veins,” she would tell me.
I give my daughter this same assurance which is why I wanted her to be among the Indigenous women gathered for the march. I wanted her to see the warrior women who are not only speaking up for gender and racial equality, but injustice, voicing the hard truths about missing and murdered indigenous women. #mmiw
I was proud to hear the women at the march share their stories, in their own voices, reinforcing to me the reason I am focusing my business on communications services to tribal communities. We, as indigenous people, need to be heard.
A few days ago I saw Zoey looking at herself in a mirror, telling herself that she is pretty, she’s strong and she can run fast. She possesses a confidence I never had at her age. It’s a constant struggle for many women. It is my fervent hope that my daughter will continue to feel this empowered, strong and beautiful every day.
by Tinhorn Consulting | Women Warriors
++EILEEN ALLISON (DINE) ++
According to the National Science Foundation, women were awarded 3.1% of bachelor’s degrees in engineering, 6.5% of bachelor’s degrees in physical sciences, 5.4% of bachelor’s degrees in mathematics and statistics, and 9.7% of bachelor’s degrees in biological sciences in 2012. So when Eileen Allison (Diné) graduated with her bachelor’s degree in Construction Management from Arizona State University (ASU) in 1998, it was a HUGE accomplishment because those percentages for women were even lower then – especially among women identifying as American Indian.
“My passion for math and science led me to study Construction Management,” Eileen said, when asked what inspired her to pursue her studies in the Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics (STEM) field.
“I can count the number of Native females on my hand in the construction management field,” she continued. “Like in any STEM field, the female representation is a small number. Females have much to offer; they offer a different perspective in the STEM fields. I know females are talented and can perform just as well or even better than their male counterparts. We need to close that gap and encourage our Native females to pursue a STEM career. It makes me happy to see Native females study STEM fields and succeed in their professional careers.”
Eileen is a mother of 4 children, and is not only very involved in the lives and education of her kids, but also in her community. Eileen has served on her local parent teacher association and basketball booster club. Currently, she is an active member of the ASU Native American Alumni Chapter and enjoys teaching primary school at her church.
Eileen credits planning and preparedness as important practices for success, and often encourages her own children to enrich their learning by taking Honors classes in school and volunteering within their community. “As a mother, I want to see my kids succeed and fulfill their educational goals,” Eileen shares. “As a mother, I can assist with building a firm foundation and it is up to my children to build up from that foundation.”
If you’d like us to help tell your story, contact us.