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HomeCELEBRITYBarack Obama and Michelle Obama Honor a Visit That Reshaped Tribal Education...

Barack Obama and Michelle Obama Honor a Visit That Reshaped Tribal Education in America


Barack Obama and Michelle Obama are marking a twelve-year milestone today. The Obama Foundation honored the occasion with a tribute on Instagram, commemorating the couple’s June 14, 2014 visit to the Standing Rock Sioux tribe in Cannon Ball, North Dakota. Young people, tribal leaders, and community members were all there that day. Most news cycles moved on fast. The work didn’t.

That visit produced real results. It triggered reforms at the Bureau of Indian Education. That agency oversees K-12 schooling on tribal lands across the country. Federal investments followed in the years after. Job training programs and tribal college funding both got a push. So did broadband access and energy projects on reservations. Those aren’t talking points. Those are real changes with real effects on people’s daily lives.

Here’s the part that makes today more than a routine anniversary. The Obamas recently sat back down with some of those young people from 2014. The Obama Foundation shared video of that conversation. More than a decade has passed since that afternoon in North Dakota. Their stories, twelve years later, say something real about what can happen when a presidential visit leads somewhere. Follow-through from the federal government isn’t guaranteed. In this case, it came through.

The Obama Foundation’s caption put it plainly: “Stories like Cannon Ball are the story of America, and it’s a reminder that when we invest in our young people, they will carry us forward.”

That’s a line worth sitting with. Not every presidential trip to a Native American community produces actual policy change. This one did. The Bureau of Indian Education isn’t a glamorous agency. It doesn’t get a lot of coverage. But it’s responsible for the education of thousands of Native students. Reforms at the agency matter to real kids.

The timing is also worth paying attention to. The Obama Presidential Center is getting close to its opening. The foundation has been in storytelling mode, lifting up lesser-known moments from the Obama years. Cannon Ball is one of those moments. It’s not Washington, D.C. It doesn’t make the usual highlight reel. But the foundation is making a strong case that it belongs in the record.

For some background, the Standing Rock Sioux community drew major national attention in 2016 over the Dakota Access Pipeline protests. That was two years after Obama’s 2014 visit. The federal investments from that trip were already in motion by then. The two moments are separate chapters in the same community’s story. It’s easy to conflate them without knowing the full timeline.

The foundation’s Instagram post crossed 80,000 likes, a solid reach for a foundation account focused on civic legacy rather than pop culture.

Barack Obama has had no shortage of retrospective moments lately, with the Presidential Center approaching. But the Cannon Ball reunion stands out from the usual anniversary content. It’s concrete. It shows results. Not every federal visit to a community produces lasting change. This one did. Some communities rarely see that kind of sustained attention. Cannon Ball did.




This story originally appeared on Celebrityinsider

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