Pearl Lujan and Abby Sarmac

Episode 4 episode art with headshots of Abby Sarmac and Pearl Lujan on the right and title on the left. Title reads from top to bottom: Season 2 Can we talk about...? Episode 4 Pearl Lujan and Abby Sarmac on going back to our roots with Kindle Project

#flowfunding #powersharing #trustbasedphilanthropy #indigenousphilanthropy #selfdeterminmation #intermediarygrantmaking

Overview 

TGP Senior Advisor Abby Sarmac hosts a conversation with Pearl Lujan from the Kindle Project’s Indigenous Women’s Flow Fund. Together, they discuss their work as intermediaries and donors together on this project and share how slowing down helped build deep and transformative relationships with Indigenous communities. 

Key Ideas and Insights

  • Democratizing the idea of who is a philanthropist (8:49)
    The Indigenous Women’s Flow Fund required donors to come to the fund not with a certain level of wealth, but with a demonstrated commitment to their communities. In this way Kindle Project is redefining what it means to be a philanthropist. “It's not just the white man in a boardroom, right? We are all philanthropists. We can all be philanthropists,” Abby shared.
     
  • Challenging dominant concepts of time (23:21)
    Abby and Pearl discuss what it was like to engage “on Indigenous time” while working amid structures and cultures built on dominant concepts of time. Specifically, they emphasize the importance of investing time in relationship and trust-building. “That deep, slow time is in some ways more valuable than all the time that just flew by in all of our board meetings and report writings and things that weren't as transformational,” Pearl mentioned.

 

Ongoing Reflections

What are ways that we can slow down to deepen relationships and trust?

 

Resources and References

  • Mary Fifield is another cohort donor with the Indigenous Women’s Flow Fund. In the 2023 Storytelling Report, Mary shares a little bit about her experience as a donor with IWFF.
     
  • Sadaf Rassoul Cameron: Co-founder and Executive Director of the Kindle Project.
     
  • Kindle Project website: The Indigenous Women’s Flow Fund is part of the Kindle Project, led by Sadaf Rassoul Cameron, which is a “women-founded, women of color-led, grassroots philanthropic organization working intersectionally to build bridges, flip power, and support community-driven philanthropy.”
     
  • Investing in Native Communities: Pearl shares that of all philanthropic dollars, less than 1% goes to Native communities. According to the Investing in Native Communities website, a collaboration with Native Americans in Philanthropy and Candid, a scant 0.4% of funding dollars are directed toward Native communities. 
     
  • Marion Rockefeller Weber is the granddaughter of J.D. Rockefeller. She began flow funding in 1991 to move away from traditional forms of philanthropy and toward more democratized and innovative solutions.
     
  • Marian Naranjo is the Founder of Honor Our Pueblo Existence H.O.P.E., a non-profit  organization based at Santa Clara Pueblo New Mexico focusing on environmental health issues as well as cultural preservation and reclamation projects.
     
  • For more information on the Indigenous Women’s Flow Fund, contact Pearl at pearl@kindleproject.org

Pearl Lujan headshot
Pearl Lujan
Indigenous Women's Flow Fund Advisor and Storyteller

Pearl Gottschalk (Lujan) is the storyteller for the Indigenous Women's Flow Fund at The Kindle Project and has been deeply committed to advancing racial equity in philanthropy for over a decade. With over 15 years of experience in humanitarian aid and philanthropy, her career spans diverse roles across Africa and Latin America, working extensively with refugee populations and frontline Indigenous communities. Previously, she managed the LUSH Cosmetics Charity Pot Fund, supporting grassroots initiatives. Pearl holds a Bachelor’s degree in International Development Studies and a Master’s degree in International Conflict Resolution. Her passion for Indigenous philanthropy is evident through her work in developing Indigenous-led funds in collaboration with organizations like The Cultural Conservancy and Indigenous Climate Action, where she served as a Healing Justice Consultant. In her spare time she loves to Salsa dance and rock climb! 

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