• Menu
  • Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar

Before Header

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter

Minnesota Native News

Association of Minnesota Public Educational Radio Stations

Header Left

  • Programs
    • MN Native News
    • Native Lights
      • Biidaapi
    • Community Health Conversations
      • COVID-19
      • Helpful Links about COVID19 in Minnesota
    • DeCoded: Native Veterans Who Helped Win World War II
    • A Mile in My Moccasins
  • About Us

Header Right

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter

Header Left

  • Programs
    • MN Native News
    • Native Lights
      • Biidaapi
    • Community Health Conversations
      • COVID-19
      • Helpful Links about COVID19 in Minnesota
    • DeCoded: Native Veterans Who Helped Win World War II
    • A Mile in My Moccasins
  • About Us

Header Right

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • Twitter
  • Programs
    • MN Native News
    • Native Lights
      • Biidaapi
    • Community Health Conversations
      • COVID-19
      • Helpful Links about COVID19 in Minnesota
    • DeCoded: Native Veterans Who Helped Win World War II
    • A Mile in My Moccasins
  • About Us
  • Programs
    • MN Native News
    • Native Lights
      • Biidaapi
    • Community Health Conversations
      • COVID-19
      • Helpful Links about COVID19 in Minnesota
    • DeCoded: Native Veterans Who Helped Win World War II
    • A Mile in My Moccasins
  • About Us

Migizi’s New Home

MN Native News October 4, 2023

Migizi Communication’s new building on Lake Street in Minneapolis
This week, Migizi Communications celebrated the grand opening of its new building.  Minnesota Native News had the opportunity to visit the new location. Deanna Standing Cloud has the story of what goes on there and what it took to get Migizi back on Lake Street.

Deanna

Migizi Communications is an after-school program for Native youth. It teaches digital storytelling and offers job training, academic support, and cultural teaching. The past couple of years have been tough for Migizi as they searched for a new home. Its former home was lost during the unrest following the murder of George Floyd in May 2020. The community tried to protect it, but the whole block was burning and they were unable to save it.

Binesikwe

We held healing sessions afterwards, we really tried to bring community together.

Deanna

Binesikwe Means is the lead instructor for First Person Productions, one of Migizi’s flagship programs.

Binesekwe

We cried with our students, because of the loss of our building, we really tried to grieve it together in a healthy way and then we had to look forward to the future.  I’ve been with Migizi for six and a half years, and I’m an enrolled member of the Oglala Lakota tribe, as well as a descendant of White Earth.

Deanna

After the fire, President Kelly Drummer worked diligently to find a permanent location in South Minneapolis. Migizi raised funds and worked on the design.

This week, they celebrated their move into their renovated new home.

Binesikwe

It was community and community only that really helped and pushed us to rebuild after the loss of our building. This open house is really a thank you to community and to the people who really stepped in at a time where were hurting and unsure of where the future was.

Deanna

The building is located at 1845 East Lake Street, across from the Minneapolis Pioneers and Soldiers Cemetery, where some of Minnesota’s first colonizers are buried. Migizi’s new light-filled headquarters used to house the Little Brothers-Friends of the Elderly. Binesikwe kindly gave me a tour of the new digs.

Binesikwe

This is our open space or CLAW area. CLAW is our Cultural, Leadership, and Academic W ellbeing programming.   

Deanna

The youth participating in Migizi programming have access to a wide variety of amenities.  

Binesikwe

Because some of our students struggle with housing stability, we also included laundry into our space, so a washer and dryer. 

Deanna

Students will also have the ability to eat together.

Binesikwe

Here is our commercial kitchen. Every evening, we provide snacks , a lot of our students come out of school hungry.

So this is our Best Buy Teen Tech Center and share space with First Person Productions program. We have a full studio setup, we’re waiting on a few more guitars and live action movie stuff to be coming in.

Deanna

All the technology available to students really reflects Migizi’s origin story.

Binesikwe

The opening of the studio, for me, it is really a step back into where Migizi first started, which was on radio and how important it is for accurate storytelling as well as the ability to build the next generation of storytellers.

Deanna

However, the contemporary narrative in the 70’s when Migizi originated was told by the colonizer’s experience. That’s what Migizi’s founders wanted to change.

Binesikwe

They founded the program initially to be a journalism program because they wanted to raise the next generation of Indigenous storytellers. They seen the inaccuracies and misrepresentation in the media of indigenous people. And they wanted to train people from our community to tell the stories of our community.

Deanna

Migizi makes their programming accessible to Native students, so being on Lake Street was important to them. Nearby South High school has a high concentration of Native students, so they wanted to be within walking distance or easy to get to on public transportation.

Migizi Communications has helped transform the lives of Native Students. Former students have become leaders and storytellers in the community. Migizi hopes they can now call 1845 Lake Street their “forever home.” This is Deanna StadingCloud with Minnesota Native News.

MARIE

You can learn more about their programs at Migizi.org.

More from Native Lights

  • Dr. Samantha Majhor: The Story Collector
    Today, we’re excited to welcome Dr. Samantha Majhor to Native Lights. Samantha is a direct descendant of Fort Peck. She’s Dakota and Assiniboine and is an assistant professor in American Indian Studies at the University of Minnesota. She focuses on Native American literature, particularly literature by Dakota and Ojibwe writers around the Great Lakes region.
  • Aleyna Morales: Baking and Believing in Herself
    Today, we’re speaking with Aleyna Morales. Aleyna grew up in the Twin Cities and Somerset, Wisconsin. Aleyna’s heritage includes Ojibwe from the Fond du Lac Band community and Mexican. She is the creator and baker behind Baked to Bliss by Laney. You can catch her selling baked goods at the Carlton County Farmers Market.
  • Adam Savariego: The Power of Asking Questions
    We’re excited today to speak with Adam Savariego. He’s a citizen of the Upper Sioux Community and is the Native American Affairs Advisor with the Minnesota Governor’s Office. Prior to his current work, Adam served on the Upper Sioux Board of Trustees and as the community cultural liaison at Yellow Medicine East High School in Granite Falls Minnesota. He’s also a traveler, a foodie and a cat lover.

Subscribe to Minnesota Native News in your favorite podcast app

Apple PodcastsSpotifyGoogle PodcastsRadio Public


  • MNN Extended Interview: Ashley Cornforth
    Ashley Cornforth, Secretary Treasurer for the Shakopee Mdewakanton Sioux Community, discusses the goals of the IndigeFit Kids Campaign, the coaching academy that was put on in partnership with the Notah Begay III Foundation, and upcoming events and programs.
  • An Update to Red Lake Nation’s Push to Transfer Back Upper Red Lake Public Lands, and White Earth Nation Expands Its Bison Harvest
    This week, Red Lake Nation’s efforts to transfer back public portions of Upper Red Lake garners support at the Minnesota DFL Convention, and White Earth Nation expands the harvest from its bison herd.
Previous Post: « COVID-19 Updates with Leah Lemm and Dr. Antony Stately
Next Post: Adrienne Zimiga-January: Bringing more Native Voices to Theaters »

Site Footer

SUBSCRIBE NOW

Apple PodcastsSpotifyGoogle PodcastsRadio Public

Copyright © 2026 Association of Minnesota Public Educational Radio Stations. All rights reserved. | Site Design by Flying Orange.
Minnesota Arts and Cultural Heritage FundFunding for Minnesota Native News and Native Lights is made possible by the Minnesota Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund and the citizens of Minnesota.