Third annual Cowboys & Angels free benefit concert Dec. 13 for White Buffalo Calf Womans Society fight against teen suicide & domestic violence

This Saturday, December 13, 2008: “Cowboys and Angels”: Third annual free northern Michigan benefit concert to battle domestic violence and teen suicides on one of the the poorest American Indian reservations in the U.S.

It was standing room only during the 2007 Cowboys and Angels benefit concert at the Falling Rock Café and Book Store in Munsing.

Rev. Dr. Lynn Hubbard, the non-profit Turtle Island Project director and a Munising pastor, played to a full house during the second annual free benefit concert.

The third annual free benefit concert will be held from 7-9 p.m. on Saturday, December 13, 2008 and include original songs by Hubbard and seasonal music. (Photos by Greg Peterson, non-profit Turtle Island Project)

(Munising, Michigan) – A free benefit concert to battle American Indian teen suicide and family violence will be held on December 13, 2008 in northern Michigan.

The non-profit Turtle Island Project (TIP) in Munising is organizing the third annual “Cowboys and Angels” concert to benefit the White Buffalo Calf Woman Society (WBCWS) in Mission, South Dakota – the first Native American domestic violence shelter in the world.

The WBCWS battles domestic violence, sexual assault and an alarming increase in teen suicides on the Rosebud Sioux Reservation, the home of the Sicangu Lakota people.

Poverty, depression, a lack of jobs, drugs, alcohol and other social problems are among the reasons behind Rosebud suicides and family violence.

Performing on Saturday, Dec. 13 from 7 – 9 p.m. at the Falling Rock Cafe and Bookstore at 104 East Munising Ave. in downtown Munising, Michigan will be Pastor Lynn Hubbard. The concert includes original songs written by Rev. Hubbard and traditional songs of the season.

The WBCWS was founded 30 years ago by a group of courageous Native American women including current executive director Tillie Black Bear.

“The White Buffalo Calf Woman’s Society and its domestic violence shelter are vital to address social issues like teen suicide and domestic violence on the Rosebud reservation,” said Dr. Hubbard, pastor of the Eden on the Bay Lutheran Church in Munising, MI. “Women and children are treated with dignity.”

“The Rosebud Reservation has been described as a Third World Country in America’s heartland,” Hubbard said. “Social problems on the Rosebud can sometimes seem overwhelming but the answer starts with a person donating money or volunteering their time and praying for the people.”

The TIP has organized numerous free benefit concerts in the U.P. and SD for the WBCWS including two by Iron County-based folk groups, White Water and Duo Borealis.

For more information call 906-202-0590 or email turtleislandproject@charter.net

Related websites:

White Buffalo Calf Woman Society, Inc.

Turtle Island Project main website

Turtle Island TV (blipTV)

Rosebud Tribe official website

email the non-profit Turtle Island Project

About yoopernewsman

I am a news reporter, writer and investigative journalist and began my career over 30 years ago as a young teenager in Augusta, GA after moving south during the middle of high school. I was co-coordinator of the 1986 original James Brown Appreciation Day in Augusta, GA, where the Godfather of Soul was always trashed by the local media who found no reasons to print or report anything positive about the music icon. I am the volunteer media advisor for two large environmental projects across Michigan's Upper Peninsula including the Earth Keeper Initiative. The group has many environmental projects including an annual Earth Day Clean sweep at two dozen free drop off sites across a 400 mile area of northern Michigan. The target of the 2007 Earth Keeper Pharmaceutical Clean Sweep are all kinds of medicines. In 2006, some 10,000 people dropped off over 320 tons of old/broken computers, cell phones and other electronic waste, all of which was recycled. In 2005, residents turned in 45 tons of household poisons and vehicle batteries. The Manoomin (Wild Rice) Project teaches at-risk teens (just sentenced in juvenile court) to respect nature and themselves by having American Indian guides escort them to very remote lakes and streams in northern Michigan to plant and care for wild rice. The teens conduct water quality and other tests to determine the best conditions for the once native grain to survive. I have always specialized in civil rights, outdoor, environmental, cops and courts reporting thanks to my late mentor Jay Mann (Jan Tillman Hutchens), an investigative reporter in Augusta, who lived by the book "Illusions."
This entry was posted in air, American Indian, Angel Wilson, animals, Argus Leader, Argus Leader newspaper, benefit, celebration, Christ, Christmas, Christmas concert, Clay Wilson, contribute, culture, death, depressed, depression, despair, domestic violence, donate, donation, Earth, east, Falling Rock Cafe, Falling Rock Cafe and Bookstore, family violence, father, fire, four directions, free, fundraiser, grave, Great Sioux Nation, guitar, help, heritage, holiday, ICT, Indian Country Today, Indigenous Peoples, lake superior, Lakota, Lara Neel, Lino "JJ" Spotted Elk Jr., Lino Spotted Elk, love, Lutheran pastor, Marie Wilcox, Michigan, mission, mother, multi-cultural, Munising, music, Native American, newspaper, north, northern Michigan, poverty, prayer, prejudice, racism, rape, Rev. Dr. George Cairns, Rev. Dr. Lynn Hubbard, Rosebud Indian Reservation, sacred, SD, seasonal, sexual assault, singing, Sioux, Sioux Falls, sky, son, song, songs, south, South Dakota, spirit, Spirits, Spiritual terrorism, St. Francis cemetery, state of emergency, Steve Young, Stoney Larvie, suffrage, suicide, teen suicide, teens, third world, Tillie Black Bear, tribal, tribe, Turtle Island Project, United States, Upper Peninsula, WBCWS, west, White Buffalo Calf Woman Society, woman, Women Suffrages, youth and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

6 Responses to Third annual Cowboys & Angels free benefit concert Dec. 13 for White Buffalo Calf Womans Society fight against teen suicide & domestic violence

  1. Pingback: TIP 2008 Concert #4: Turtle island Project Cowboys & Angels White Buffalo Calf Woman Society benefit « The Turtle Island Project: Respecting the Earth, Native American and Indigenous Peoples

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  6. Pingback: TIP 2008 Concert #4: Turtle island Project Cowboys & Angels White Buffalo Calf Woman Society benefit « The Turtle Island Project: Respecting the Earth, Native American and Indigenous Peoples

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