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Shoe company takes steps to reconcile with Indigenous community

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The company began a reconciliation directive in 2020, and most recently launched the redesign one of the most iconic moccasins sold by Minnetonka.

MINNEAPOLIS, Minnesota — The Minnesota shoe company, Minnetonka is woven into the fabric of the community dating back to 1946. As the fourth generation of the family behind the shoes brings in fresh ideas, they’re listening to consumers more than ever before. 

“I am really grateful that we had a chance to learn, listen and understand more around what cultural appropriation is,” Jorie Miller Sherer, Minnetonka’s president, said. 

Miller Sherer and her father, David Miller the company’s CEO, began educating themselves on cultural appropriation years ago. Miller Sherer says the conversations became more of a focus in the fall of 2019. Following the civil unrest in Minneapolis after George Floyd’s murder, Miller Sherer says the mission to reconcile with the indigenous community skyrocketed to their top priority in May 2020. 

The first step: an apology posted to their website in the summer of 2020. 

“It was very vulnerable to have that out there,” Miller Sherer said. ” My greatest feeling at the time was relief. We were very fortunate that we did this on our own time. We had the fortune to really learn and listen from people in the community before we talked about it publicly.”  

There was a general positive reaction at the time but their plan didn’t end there. 

Adrienne Benjamin was hired as a reconciliation advisor. Benjamin, an Anishinaabe artist and community activist, is a member of the Mille Lacs Band of Ojibwe. She has played an integral part of Minnetonka’s commitment planning. 

“We know that we have appropriated and we are appropriating. It’s about how we show up better,” Miller Sherer said. 

Showing up better includes building organic relationships with Indigenous designers, like Benjamin and Lucie Skjefte. 

“When I started to see and understand the work they were doing around reconciliation, even approaching it first with an apology; that was impactful for us. Acknowledging that and standing in the accountability in that,” Skjefte said. 

The Anishinaabeg designer is a citizen of Red Lake Nation, the federally owned and fully sovereign Ojibwe tribe in Minnesota. She most recently crafted her own redesign of one of Minnetonka’s most classic styles. It’s called the Thunderbird Animikii. It pays homage to her Anishinaabe heritage and her son, whose name is Animikii. It translates to “Thunderbird” in Ojibwemowin. For many tribes, the Thunderbird is a revered supernatural being, playing a key role as protector, rainmaker, and enforcer of justice. 


“I definitely see this as being a reclamation by our people and reconnecting and sharing our understanding of it and its intention and purpose,” Skjefte said. 

Miller Sherer says Skjefte’s didn’t just redesign the shoe, but she gave it a story. Skjefte owns the rights to the design, so for every pair of the Animikii Thunderbird purchased, a product lifetime royalty will be paid directly to her. 

“Some of them [designers] have really connected to certain products we have. Some are designing new products. Some are designing materials to replace appropriated materials. This is really about building long-term relationships,” Miller Sherer said. 

Minnetonka is also donating to Mni Sota Fund – an urban Native CDFI selected by Skjefte that helps Indigenous people in Minnesota get training and capital for home ownership and entrepreneurship. It’s one of the several Indigenous non-profits that Minnetonka donates to in effort to uplift and amplify their work. 

Skjefte’s first design with Minnetonka was inspired by nature. Her floral beaded designs in the Ziigwan Waabigwan Moc Collection sold out, so did the three more that followed. 

“I do this work because we’re still here, and it’s important to give time and space to showcase that,” Skjefte said. 

Watch the latest local news from the Twin Cities and across Minnesota in our YouTube playlist:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=videoseries



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Memorial service announced for NPS Ranger Kevin Grossheim

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The service to honor law enforcement ranger Kevin Grossheim will be held on Sunday, Oct. 13 in International Falls, but will also be livestreamed.

INTERNATIONAL FALLS, Minn — A memorial service has been set for a National Park Service (NPS) law enforcement ranger who died in the line of duty while attempting to rescue a family of campers stranded by hazardous weather. 

Officials at Voyageurs National Park announced that the service to honor ranger Kevin Grossheim will take place at 1 p.m. this Sunday, Oct. 13, in the gym of International Falls High School. The memorial will also be livestreamed by Koochiching County Community Television Station KCC-TV on both the station’s Facebook and YouTube accounts

The 55-year-old Grossheim responded to an emergency call the afternoon of Oct. 6 from a family of three that was stranded on an island on Namakan Lake in the Voyageurs National Park wilderness. Conditions were treacherous, with wind gusts exceeding 40 miles per hour and waves of five to six feet. 

Grossheim, a 23-year Voyageurs National Park veteran and expert boater, picked up the stranded campers and was towing their boat to shore when his craft began taking on water, eventually capsizing. The three people he rescued were able to swim to safety but Grossheim didn’t surface. 

His body was later recovered from Namakan Lake following a three-hour search. 

Those who knew Grossheim described him as an experienced outdoorsman and boater “with a servant’s heart.” Along with being a ranger, Grossheim served as a volunteer firefighter and paramedic in his community of Kabetogema. 

“Quiet guy, big heart, and just loved to help people,” said St. Louis County Sheriff Gordon Ramsay. “He was built for this job.”

NPS officials say support continues to pour in for Grossheim’s family. Those who would like to send a note or expression of condolence can send them to: 

The Grossheim Family (In the care of Voyageurs National Park) 360 Highway 11 East, International Falls, MN 56649.

 Information about donation opportunities will be available in the coming days.



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Ragas of India to perform in Minneapolis

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Broaden your musical horizons with this accessible concert.

MINNEAPOLIS — If you’re looking for new melodic music, then set aside Saturday night for Ragas of India.

Vocalist Samarth Nagarkar will lead a Khayal music ensemble, a type of classical music that has roots in north India. The music is a blend of melodic (ragas) and rhythmic (talas) improvisation, according to the MacPhail Center for Music. 

The performance will take place at 8 p.m. at Antonello Hall in Minneapolis. 

Nagarkar and Michael Cain, the director of electronic music recording arts at MacPhail, will visit KARE 11 News at Noon on Thursday to share more about the concert. 

The concert has choose-what-you-pay ticketing, meaning that prices start at $5 and you can determine if you can afford to pay more. 

For tickets and more information, click here. 



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Student struck by driver while in crosswalk near Duluth East H.S.

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Police say the 14-year-old girl was in a crosswalk outside Duluth East High School Thursday morning when she was struck by a vehicle.

DULUTH, Minn. — A high school student in Duluth is at home recovering from minor injuries after being struck by a motorist while walking to school in Duluth. 

Police say the 14-year-old girl was in a crosswalk at 40th Ave. E. and Luverne Street near Duluth East High School when a vehicle driven by a 69-year-old woman turned at the intersection and hit her. 

A Duluth East school resource officer quickly responded to the scene. Police say the teen suffered minor injuries in the incident and went home for the rest of the school day.

The driver was issued a citation for failing to yield to a pedestrian in a crosswalk. 

Police are reminding drivers in Duluth and elsewhere to use caution when in school zones, and be vigilant for pedestrians. 





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