As you consider your personal philanthropic investments this Giving Tuesday, I ask you to reflect not only on what you give, buthowyou give. So much of the change we saw in philanthropy over the last year was a shift in the practice of giving. We saw many individual and institutional funders give up power by providing gifts with no strings attached. No expectations for how the funds would be used, fewer burdensome reporting and administrative requirements, and more multi-year commitments.

Giving should be a practice grounded in values. As Indigenous people, we center much of how we give around the values of reciprocity and trust. As we今年早些时候的报道, the shift toward trust-based philanthropy by many donors wasn’t only respectful to those nonprofit leaders who know their communities best—it had real results. If you believe in the leadership of Native people themselves, giving flexible dollars show that you trust them and value their own knowledge and connections in their community. Donors from outside our communities can’t determine the impact of their investments through budgets and reporting, but they can by investing in—and trusting—Indigenous leadership.

As you consider your gifts to Native-led nonprofits and Tribal communities this Giving Tuesday, we urge you to simply write a check to invest in their mission, and trust that they will make the impact. Here are a few ways you can give differently this year to Native people:

  • Learn about Tribal communities and current philanthropic investments on ourInvesting in Native Communitiesplatform in partnership with Candid or sign-up for ourIndian 101 series.
  • Donate to ourNative Voices Risingcollaborative in partnership with the Common Counsel Foundation where Native people make funding decisions for a national network of Native-led power-building organizations.
  • Explorethe many other Native-led community foundations and nonprofit organizations that are helping get resources to tribal communities

Read the full article aboutgiving to Native communitiesby Erik Stegman at Native Americans in Philanthropy.