Custer, S.D. resident, Black Hills tourists donate $1,000 for White Buffalo Calf Women Society, the oldest Native American domestic violence shelter
The crowd claps during a performance on Sunday (August 12, 2007) by two northern Michigan folk groups and a popular Native American singer at the Custer Lutheran Fellowship church in Custer S.D.
Family string band White Water, and duet Duo Borealis were joined by singer Roxanne Sazzue of Fort Thompson, S.D. during the free benefit concert for the White Buffalo Calf Woman Society (WBCWS) in Mission, S.D., the nation's oldest Native American battered woman's shelter.
Organizers say about $1,000 was raised to battle the teen suicide emergency and rising domestic violence at the Lakota Sioux Rosebud reservation in Mission, SD.
The WBCWS has served the Lakota Sioux Rosebud reservation for thirty years providing battered woman's services for all women and children.
(Photo by Javier H. Alegree, WBCWS Public Relations Specialist; Media and Education)
Family string band White Water, and duet Duo Borealis were joined by singer Roxanne Sazzue of Fort Thompson, S.D. during the free benefit concert for the White Buffalo Calf Woman Society (WBCWS) in Mission, S.D., the nation's oldest Native American battered woman's shelter.
Organizers say about $1,000 was raised to battle the teen suicide emergency and rising domestic violence at the Lakota Sioux Rosebud reservation in Mission, SD.
The WBCWS has served the Lakota Sioux Rosebud reservation for thirty years providing battered woman's services for all women and children.
(Photo by Javier H. Alegree, WBCWS Public Relations Specialist; Media and Education)









