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Henry Red Cloud: Solar Warrior for Native America

The YES! Breakthrough 15: Bringing renewable energy and jobs to reservations.

Henry Red Cloud photo by Dan Bihn

HOW TO BREAK THROUGH
“Hope is the most important thing that people need to regain. I just want to be one example of someone who overcame hardships—one source of hope. That’s all we need to start seeing possibilities for ourselves, our children, and our grandchildren.”
Henry Red Cloud

Photo by Dan Bihn.

15 logoMeet 15 extraordinary people transforming the way we live.

Henry Red Cloud’s address is 1001 Solar Warrior Road on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation in South Dakota. But the road sign hasn’t arrived. A windmill towering over the cottonwoods in the draw of White Clay Creek marks the location of Red Cloud Renewable Energy Center and his “Solar Warrior Community.”

It consists of a mud-and-straw-bale roundhouse for trainings, a whimsically painted Quonset hut factory for assembling solar air heaters, an array of solar panels from Germany, a horse trailer that doubles as a paper recycling center for making insulation, a vegetable garden, and a new concrete foundation for what will become a 20-person dormitory.

Here Red Cloud directs the work of Lakota Solar Enterprises, his American Indian-owned and operated business dedicated to providing renewable energy to some of the poorest communities in the United States.

The business has been part of a journey home for the 52-year-old Oglala Lakota man. He left the reservation to join the civil rights movement in the 1970s, then found himself working construction, walking high steel in cities around the country.

Naomi KleinSelected by author Naomi Klein: “Tribes are under intense pressure to allow their lands to be punctured by fossil fuel development. Red Cloud is showing that there is another path out of poverty.”

But when he returned home, he faced the reality of few jobs and little housing. He crafted teepees and took volunteer training from Trees, Water & People, which later became his partner organization.

One night, trying to sleep in the back seat of his car, Red Cloud had the vision for Lakota Solar: training people right on the reservation to build and install solar heaters so they could study at home and support the extended family, or tiospaye. Later, he added a buffalo ranching cooperative to the enterprise.

“The house, the buffalo, renewable energy: I’m not into it to become a millionaire,” Red Cloud says. “I’m just here passing it on to the next generation like the grandfathers did for us. That way surely their prophecy is going to be realized.”

Red Cloud’s 16-month-old granddaughter is the seventh generation descended from Makhpiya Luta, or Chief Red Cloud, who negotiated the 1868 Fort Laramie Treaty, which left 60 million acres of buffalo hunting grounds to the Great Sioux Nation—until Congress later whittled it into smaller reservation parcels.

“Our ancestors made a treaty with the U.S. government,” Red Cloud recounts. But they also made “a pact with the Creator for seven generations”—hearkening to a well-known prophecy that they would suffer if they did not provide for their descendants’ future prosperity.

Red Cloud was raised by his grandparents. “You can get an education and you can live a comfortable life,” he remembers his grandfather saying, “but if you want to have a really good life, create some work for other people.”

To date, the Red Cloud Center has trained 84 people, most of whom have secured jobs based on the experience—a striking accomplishment given the staggering unemployment across Indian country.

Lakota Solar Enterprises has built and installed more than 1,200 small-scale individual solar heating systems. The heaters save low-income homeowners up to 30 percent on utility bills that, over the course of a freezing Northern Plains winter, can add up to more than $1,000. The systems are Red Cloud’s own innovation: For two years, he fiddled with a 1970s design to come up with the $2,500 unit his business produces today. “We’re using 21st century material and tweaking it Lakota-style,” he says.

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Recently, Red Cloud has engaged 24 Northern Plains tribes as partners. The tribes have been spending millions of dollars of federal funding to assist tribal members with energy costs, such as propane. Now they can use some of the money for energy efficiency and to send tribal members to Red Cloud’s renewable energy courses.

Red Cloud also has contracts to install wind turbines and solar arrays atop public health clinics on the Pine Ridge and Rosebud Indian Reservations. He hopes the projects will help topple what he considers to be a wall of skepticism about green building techniques—the legacy of failed development projects on the reservations.

“We are just getting back to the memory of the old way and becoming sustainable again,” Red Cloud says. “We have always had our Sun Dance ceremonies. We’re warriors doing our warriors’ deed in the 21st century for the seventh generation.”


Talli Nauman wrote this article for The YES! Breakthrough 15, the Winter 2012 issue of YES! Magazine. Talli is co-founder and co-director of the Aguascalientes, Mexico-based bilingual independent media project Periodismo para Elevar la Conciencia Ecológica, PECE (Journalism to Raise Environmental Awareness), initiated with a MacArthur grant in 1994.

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YES! Magazine encourages you to make free use of this article by taking these easy steps. Nauman, T. (2011, November 20). Henry Red Cloud: Solar Warrior for Native America. Retrieved May 22, 2012, from YES! Magazine Web site: http://cms.yesmagazine.org/issues/the-yes-breakthrough-15/henry-red-cloud-solar-warrior-for-native-america. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License Creative Commons License


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Reader Comments

remembering the old ways

Posted by Roxanne Peterson at Dec 23, 2011 10:51 PM
This is such an encouraging article. Native Americans living on reservations are uniquely poised to flourish under the new economic paradigm. They've got their intentional communities in place with a strong cultural infrastructure and can now move forward with ushering in the green revolution. This is what many of us are trying to envision in our own lives. It's wonderful that the ancient inherent wisdom of the Native American cultures are finally prevailing across the land.

Thank you for your comment

Posted by Jennifer Kaye at Jan 06, 2012 01:04 PM
Hi Roxanne, thanks for your interesting comment. I'd love to put this in the folder for possible inclusion in the readers' letters section. Would you mind if we considered this for publication? If you agree, we'd also like to include your town/ city and state along with the comment. Could you please email me this information?

Jennifer Kaye
Editorial Assistant
jkaye [at] yesmagazine [dot] org

An illusion

Posted by John Weber at Jan 04, 2012 06:24 PM
Solar and wind capturing devices are not alternative energy sources. They are extensions of the fossil fuel supply. There is an illusion of looking at the trees and not the forest in the “Renewable” energy world. Not seeing the systems, machineries, fossil fuel uses and environmental assaults that create the devices to capture the sun, wind and biofuels allows myopia and false claims.

Even the picture with the high tunnel shows the use of fossil fuels. The plastic is made from and with fossil fuels. The aluminum tubing is mined and processed with fossil fuels and creates environmental degradation.

To get the materials for these devices we must get oil from tar sands ruining the land and waters of Canadian Native Americans. And we must get oil and natural gas by fracking, endangering our water and causing localized earthquakes.

We hope for business as usual without the unintended consequences. It can not happen. The old way of human and animal power is the only way we can preserve the earth for the next generations. I understand these men and women's hearts are in a caring and hopeful place. They need to see the big picture.

A story in pictures and diagrams:
From Machines making machines making machines
http://sunweber.blogspot.com/[…]/machines-making-machines-making.html
and
An oak tree is renewable. A horse is renewable. They reproduce themselves. The human-made equipment used to capture solar energy or wind energy is not renewable. There is considerable fossil fuel energy embedded in this equipment. The many components used in devices to capture solar energy, wind energy, tidal energy and biomass energy – aluminum, glass, copper, rare metals, petroleum in many forms to name a few – are fossil fuel dependent.

From: Energy in the Real World with pictures of proof.
http://sunweber.blogspot.com/[…]/energy-in-real-world.html


Go Henry!

Posted by SKane at Mar 14, 2012 07:14 PM
John, point made, but how about tackling that issue with main stream America and perhaps let the Native Americans catch up with what is available now. Lakota Solar ROCKS!

SKane

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