Posted on Leave a comment

Benevolent Baking

Philanthropy doesn’t have an age limit. Just ask Dorothy Shannon, a resident of Avera Brady Health and Rehab in Mitchell.

Shannon, an octogenarian, hasn’t let her move to assisted living stop her from sharing her skills with others. She still bakes delicious cookies and other treats, which she sells to residents, employees and visitors to the assisted living center. Proceeds from those sales go to Shannon’s favorite charities.

It takes a lot of cookies to make a difference, but Shannon’s up to the challenge. With help from Activities Coordinator Lisa Larson and other staff members, she made and sold enough treats to pay for a big television for all Avera Brady residents to enjoy.

When asked about her favorite Dorothy Shannon creation, Nola Myers, a member of Avera Brady’s activities staff, rattled off a list: butterhorn rolls, chocolate chip cookies, sugar cookies, peanut butter balls, toffee and a popcorn cake made in an angel food pan. Shannon’s Heavenly Desserts Cookbook, created during her stay at the home, includes recipes for many of these sweets.

Shannon may be acquiring more distant fans as well. She and Larson are both avid viewers of The Ellen DeGeneres Show. Larson sent a package to DeGeneres with a letter telling Shannon’s story, a copy of her cookbook, and most importantly, cookies and other treats. In return, they scored 4 free tickets to the January 15th show.

It’s a long way from Mitchell to California, but Shannon’s had help. Avera Brady sold popcorn balls for three weeks this winter to help pay for the trip. Shannon’s daughter Colleen, her granddaughter and Lisa Larson will escort her to the taping. The show will most likely air on Wednesday. Shannon’s entourage doesn’t know what Ellen has in store for them, but as one Brady staff member pointed out,”It’s not every day that an elderly nursing home resident from South Dakota gets invited to be on a national tv show.”

True enough. Have a great trip, Dorothy. We hope you and your family and friends enjoy your California adventure.

Posted on Leave a comment

The Bottum Line on Wisdom

Joseph “Jody” Bottum has become the international expert on South Dakota Christmas, and that sounds like one of the best writing gigs ever.
Readers of our paper magazine will recall that we told Bottum’s story in our Nov/Dec issue. The Pierre native was making quite a name for himself on the East Coast as a prolific writer and essayist for the Atlantic, the Weekly Standard, the Wall Street Journal and other top publications.
But he and his wife wanted to give geographic roots to their teenage daughter, Faith, and Jody hoped to explore new writing opportunities so they moved home to South Dakota — to a big old wood-frame house that was the childhood home to Leslie Jensen, who became governor of South Dakota in 1936.
Last year he wrote a Kindle e-book called Dakota Christmas about his remembrances of early holidays, and this year he published The Christmas Plains, also a reflection on the spirituality of the plains.
Bottum also has a new Kindle book you can buy for 99 cents titled The Wise Guy. I read it last weekend. It’s an entertaining yarn about a community of modern day outlaws and thieves who are compelled to perform 12 robberies at Christmas-time — a blend of The Sting and It’s a Wonderful Life.
Bottum says some of the characters are modeled after people he’s known in Pierre. Who, exactly, in the political town of Pierre shares traits with common criminals and thieves? He declined to answer officially. But he did acknowledge that a distinguished old lady in The Wise Guy has a bit of his grandmother. She imparts some wisdom to the thieves.
Wisdom, Bottum told me, doesn’t seem like such rare commodity in South Dakota. “When I was living on the East Coast, I knew a lot of smart people but I find that I find a lot more wise people back here on the plains.”
I thought of Bottum’s comment as I watched the youth of Yankton at a Christmas concert last night in Yankton. The beautiful boys and girls all seemed very smart, very talented. But how do we, as a community, also raise them to be wise?
If Jody Bottum knows anything — and I’m betting that some of his grandmother has rubbed off on him — then we’re on the right track. Raise them as South Dakotans — with big doses of nature, church, community and family. Let them pick pasque flowers and smell mountain pines and wander trails and canoe the Big Sioux. Show them how to catch a walleye, find a mushroom, ride a goat, or whatever else you yourself might know.
Teach them to be a real South Dakotan and a lot of the other things must just follow along as nicely as can be.
Posted on Leave a comment

Lakota Voice Project Opens

Images of hope were on display at the Lakota Voice Project art opening at the Little Wound Elementary School in Kyle, South Dakota on June 22. Pine Ridge schoolchildren were given disposable cameras and asked to take photos documenting what hope looks like. The exhibit is part of an effort by Oglala Lakota College business students to raise awareness about the high suicide rate on the reservation. Photos by Jeff Easton.

Posted on Leave a comment

Visions of Hope

What does hope look like to the young eyes of Pine Ridge Reservation? There will be a thousand examples of it on display this Friday, June 22, at the Lakota Voice Project art installation opening at the Little Wound Elementary School Auditorium in Kyle.

The project is the brainchild of business students at Oglala Lakota College. They wanted to raise awareness about the alarmingly high suicide rate on Pine Ridge, a problem that had touched every single one of them. To do so, the college students distributed hundreds of disposable cameras to Lakota schoolchildren, with only one rule — to document what hope looks like. The children did, and their visions are beautiful.

The American Advertising Federation of the Black Hills helped the Oglala Lakota College students develop the Lakota Voice Project. The collaboration has proved as inspiring for the professional mentors as it has for the youth. Jason Alley, a board member of the Advertising Federation, recently wrote,”This class of college students gave me a first glimpse of a world that few advertising professionals truly understand. And they gave me a view of a way that life can be lived that surprised me, that invigorated and enlightened me. More importantly, they are a shining example to our local advertising community at large. Do something to better your community. Do something to change social forces. Do something that won’t show up in your company’s bottom line. Do something.”

Do something. That’s a good lesson for all of us to take from the Lakota Voice Project’s messages of hope.

Posted on Leave a comment

Give “Tanks” to Your Community Do-Gooder

It seems to be the season for giving. Girl Scouts are trudging through snow packed sidewalks to sell cookies, school clubs are peddling magazine subscriptions and city halls are hosting dances for volunteer firefighters, new senior centers and some just to pay the heating bill.

In my small town, I’m seeing even more. Neighbors racing to scoop each other’s driveways. Dads spending entire weekends coaching youth basketball tournaments. The list goes on and on.

Cenex stations across the Midwest are recognizing those volunteers through their Tanks of Thanks program. Nominate your community do-gooder at TanksofThanks.com and they’ll be placed in a drawing for a $50 gas card. A dozen gift cards are given out each month.

In addition to the monthly drawing, each Cenex dealer or retailer can also give away gift cards to individuals they see doing good in their local communities. By the end of 2012, it is anticipated that Tanks of Thanks will have recognized more than 2,500 people in small and rural communities across the country.

That’s a lot of free trips to the gas pump.

Posted on Leave a comment

Small Town Saturday Nights

Music has been connecting people since a caveman made a flute some 50,000 years ago. Small towns in South Dakota are using the power of music to strengthen community ties.

In the 1990s the small town of Peever in northeast South Dakota badly needed to replace their community center. The old hall held only 70 people and was falling apart. But Peever is not a wealthy town. The streets are gravel, the buildings worn and most of the citizens are retired or wage-earners.

But Peever’s people know how to sing and strum the guitar, so monthly jamborees were held to raise money. “I’d say per capita Roberts County has more musicians than most any place in the country,” Don Backman, a retired dairy farmer told us awhile back. The musicians donated their time and a freewill donation was taken at the door. “We just asked people to give what they wanted,” Backman said. “If they were really short, they could take a little out.” Despite the generous spirit of the jam organizers, they had enough money for a new hall within a few years.

Soon the Glacial Lakes towns of Revillo, South Shore and Roslyn started similar events to raise money. South Shore donated jamboree earnings to the Salvation Army after the organization helped their town following a wind storm. Revillo raised enough for a new community center. And in the 1990s South Shore hosted country music concerts to restore Punished Woman’s Lake.

Peever, after 16 years, stopped their jamborees in the spring of 2010, but Wilmot picked up where they left off and began the Whetstone Jamboree. Several of the Peever musicians show up to carry on the tradition. Edean Landmark was a favorite musician at Peever and now his daughter, Wendy Landmark, is a regular at the jamboree circuit, including the new one in Wilmot. “What’s fun about it is that it is a family show and the strong community involvement. People come from miles away to enjoy our local musicians. There is a lot of local talent.” Wendy grew up singing country music in Peever, but now sings the blues with the Watertown band “The Bluezz’l Do.”

A typical jamboree starts with a featured band. After the band plays a few numbers, it turns into a house band and performers take turns doing two songs each. Young, old, experienced and inexperienced musicians are all welcome to take the stage

“I like the opportunity it gives young people to get that feel for performing in front of an audience as well as with a backup band,” says Cheryl Rondeau-Basset, an organizer of the Whetstone Jamboree.”I hope it encourages young people to be interested in music. Music is something you can enjoy all your life.”

Musicians interested in performing should arrive 30 minutes early to sign up. The audience is treated to coffee, snacks, door prizes and a few jokes from the announcer.

The same spirit of sharing music and bringing people together inspired similar gatherings in two small Black Hills towns. Weekly bluegrass jams in Rochford and Rockerville are laid back rituals with no admission fees. Any musician can join, but only with an acoustic instrument.

“They just enjoy each other, teach each other and share each others’ music,” says Betsy Harn, owner of the Moonshine Gulch Saloon in Rochford.

In southeast South Dakota, Doug and Judi Sharples have transformed Gayville’s old grocery store into a little Branson. The Saturday night entertainers — which often include the popular Poker Alice Band and the McNeills from Springfield — especially focus on old time, folk and country music.


Glacial Lakes Jamborees

Roslyn: First full weekend of the month on Saturday night and Sunday afternoon. Roslyn Creamery Company.

Revillo: Third Sunday of the month. Community Center.

South Shore: Fourth Saturday of the month. Community Center.

Wilmot (Whetstone Jamboree): Second Saturday of January, April, July, October and December in 2012. Community Center.

Black Hills Jams

Rochford: Every Sunday afternoon at 3 p.m., Moonshine Gulch Saloon.

Rockerville: Bluegrass jam every Thursday at 7 p.m., Gaslight Saloon.

Posted on Leave a comment

Art of Healing

Sixteen people begin teaching new fine arts classes in Yankton this month. They’re all volunteers with the Art of Healing program started by Amy Miner, executive director of the Yankton Area Arts Association.

Art of Healing is in partnership with the Avera Sacred Heart Cancer Center and is offered free for cancer survivors or those undergoing treatment. Students may choose from classes like ballroom dancing, drawing, calligraphy, wine making, poetry and sculpture. I’ll be teaching a six-week session on yoga for beginners starting next week. Each class is small and personal. Participants can bring a relative, co-survivor, or caregiver for support. And this is not a time to worry about talent or ability. The classes are for exploration, discovery and having fun.

The initial response to the program has been slow, but Miner is optimistic. She is also a breast cancer survivor and taught guitar lessons for a similar program while living in Hawaii.”The Hawaiians celebrate this wonderful concept called kahi’au, which simply means to give what goodness and talent you have freely with no expectation of any return,” says Miner. It’s a beautiful concept. I look forward to teaching with this program and watching it grow. Besides, Miner says it will be good for my karma. So I guess it’s not entirely without compensation.

If you would like to take part in the Art of Healing Program as a student or volunteer, call or email Amy at 665-9754 and yaa@iw.net. Participants can sign up for as many or few classes as they would like. Please pass this information along if you know of anyone who could benefit!

Posted on Leave a comment

We’re Walking for Joe

As you read this, Joe Andrews is just hours away from pushing a needle into his finger. Joe has Type I diabetes, so regularly checking his blood sugar is a daily ritual. Before breakfast. Two hours later. Before lunch. Two hours later. Before supper. Two hours later. And overnight, but those responsibilities fall with mom and dad. A growing 8-year-old needs his sleep. So no matter what time you read this — 6 a.m., 4 p.m. or midnight — a finger poke is never far away.

And that’s how it’s been, every day, since he was diagnosed in August 2007. In one way that’s a blessing. He has little to no memory of life pre-diabetes. To him, monitoring his glucose levels is”normal.” Still, no one should have to go through life squeezing blood from his or her fingers 10 times a day.

The exciting thing is that soon, people may not have to. Thanks to research being done right here in South Dakota, doctors are closer than ever to finding a cure. The staff at South Dakota Magazine is committed to helping, and that’s why for the second year we’ve formed a team to raise funds for the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation.

We’ll be going to Sioux Falls on Saturday, January 28, to take part in South Dakota’s annual Walk for the Cure at the Empire Mall. Already over 50 teams are registered with the common goal of raising $300,000 for the South Dakota/Minnesota chapter. Please consider donating to our team. You can do so through our team page. Last year we raised $4,000, but we know we can do better, so we’ve upped our goal to $5,000. With your help, millions of kids like Joe are one step closer to a life without finger pokes and insulin injections.

Posted on Leave a comment

Sweet Time


Editor’s Note: This story originally appeared in our Nov/Dec 2009 issue. In 2011, donations of fudge for state prisoners will be accepted Dec. 12-16 at four locations:

St. Michael Parish –1600 Marion Rd., Sioux Falls
East Side Lutheran Church –1300 East 10th St., Sioux Falls
Benedictine Multicultural Center –2500 5th St SE, Watertown
St. Benedict Parish — 1500 St. Benedict Drive, Yankton

These sites provide holiday treats for inmates in Sioux Falls, Springfield and Yankton. Rapid City and Pierre have their own gift sack programs, so every prisoner in South Dakota will receive something for Christmas. To find out about the Rapid City inmate sack program, call Len Portillo at 605-641-2211. Email Rev. Michelle Bradley at churchofhope@midco.net to learn about Pierre’s program.



Just after the Christmas Eve dinner, chaplains and volunteers will hand out small paper sacks to 3,000 state prisoners in Sioux Falls, Springfield and Yankton. Inside are two Christmas cards nestled among five pieces of hard candy, one cup of peanuts in the shell, a candy cane and two squares of homemade fudge.

Families are not allowed to send food or gifts into the prison. They can give money, but many inmates receive nothing. The cards and candy are the only things that will mark their holiday.

Leonard Blue Thunder has been incarcerated since 1989.”To some in the free world maybe it’s not much, but for me and my friends it’s a very big treat that we wait for the whole year,” he said.”It’s like at home during Christmas, Grandma used to make fudge for us.”

The Christmas cards are handmade by elementary and Sunday school students.”One inmate who had been in prison for seven or eight years saved every one of the cards and took them with him when he left,” said Mary Montoya, penitentiary volunteer for Native Americans. Another inmate was deeply touched when he discovered that the name on one of the cards was the same as his child.

Prison is isolating, particularly during the holidays.”It’s very lonesome and you long to be home with loved ones,” said Blue Thunder.”Sometimes the best part of the holidays is a card from someone you forgot about. It sure cheers your soul up by remembering the good times you had. Then we appreciate the little things in life that we used to do, like going for a simple walk and just being around family at supper time.”

Inmates especially appreciate the fudge and cards because they rarely receive anything homemade.”Anything that helps connect them with the outside — their families or when they were kids — softens them and takes the hardness of prison away,” said the Rev. Regan Beauchamp.”It makes them feel connected, less isolated.”

Most of the prisoners’ fudge comes from home kitchens, but the Catholic sisters of Sacred Heart Monastery in Yankton cooked some in 2008. The monastery also became a drop-off point (above) for Christmas bags that were assembled for prisoners in Yankton and Springfield.

Donated fudge has been a part of the Christmas sack program at the South Dakota State Penitentiary in Sioux Falls for 25 years. Yankton and Springfield state prisons were added recently.

The Rev. Joe Mardian started the fudge program. He raised funds and arranged to stuff the sacks. When he left, the program was overseen by chaplains of various faiths. For a while it was run by St. Dysmas, a Lutheran prison congregation. Dysmas was the traditional name given to the good thief next to Christ on the cross; it’s a common name for a prison ministry. Recently the Christmas sack program has been organized and sponsored by an ecumenical group of prison, religious and cultural volunteers.

Prisoners in solitary confinement receive bags along with everyone else.”We deliver sacks to the door and wish them Merry Christmas,” said Beauchamp. An inmate was on a hunger strike during the holidays a few years ago, but when a chaplain arrived with fudge the strike promptly came to an end.

The recipe has been tweaked a few times over the years.”We were getting fudge that was so hard it could be used as a weapon,” said the Rev. Gary Ternes, a prison chaplain. The present fudge formula is easy to make, doesn’t scorch and most importantly, remains soft.

Appeals for fudge and donations for the other Christmas sack treats are made to parishes of all denominations.”One thing that is neat about the program is that it’s ecumenical — there are people from every faith handing out sacks,” says Montoya.

Nobody calculates how much fudge it takes for 3,000 sacks. “Somehow we end up having enough,” says Beauchamp.”The peanuts and candy — of course we have enough — but the fudge is by faith.”



If you would like to make a donation, here are a couple of prison fudge guidelines: The recipe must be followed exactly and variations will not be allowed inside the prison. Each piece of fudge must be wrapped in plastic wrap; plastic bags are not allowed. For further information or to make donations please contact Rev. Gary Ternes at (605) 367-5113 or e-mail gary.ternes@state.sd.us.

‘Christmas Sack’ Fudge Recipe

1 1/2 sticks butter or margarine
1/2 lb Velveeta cheese
2 lbs powdered sugar
Ω cup unsweetened dry cocoa
1 tbsp vanilla
Ω cup chopped walnuts
Ω cup chocolate chips

In a large saucepan, melt cheese, chocolate chips, and butter together stirring constantly until smooth. Remove from the heat and add the vanilla and nuts. In a large bowl, sift together the sugar and cocoa. Pour the cheese mixture onto the sugar and cocoa mixture and stir until completely mixed. The candy will be stiff.

Using your hands (covered with gloves or plastic wrap) remove the candy from the bowl and press it evenly in a 9 x 13 inch pan lightly sprayed on the bottom with nonstick spray. When cool, cut into 24 pieces.