About Our Group

About the Honor Native Land Fund:

HNLF is an all-volunteer network of non-Native people in the Midwest who partner with and financially support Indigenous-led movements for rematriation. We understand rematriation to mean the Indigenous-led work of retoring sacred relationships between Indigenous people and their ancestral land, as well as the physical return of land to the Indigenous people from whom it was stolen.

In 2021, a small group of descendants of European settlers near Dubuque, IA — inspired by the growing Voluntary Land Tax movement — began meeting to discuss how we as non-Native people might contribute a voluntary “rent” or “tax” to a local Indigenous nation or organization to demonstrate respect for the fact that we live on Native land.

In 2023, HNLF was grateful to find a partner in the Great Plains Action Society, an Indigenous-led organization who for over ten years has been resisting colonization and working to rematriate land in Iowa in order to “ignite a reclamation of Indigenous agency, sovereignty, and rebuild our ancient relationship with the environment—all while helping to curb the climate crisis.”

In 2025, we began partnering with Reaffirming Indigenous Ways, an Indigenous-led multiracial group in Eastern Nebraska that runs the Niskíthe Prayer Camp, which peacefully occupies land in order to protect ceremonial grounds, land, waters, and non-human relatives from proposed development.

HNLF is inspired by similar land tax movements:

About our Logo

From the Artist, Moselle Singh:

This logo emerged from weaving together three threads:

  • The tallgrass prairie

  • The Oneness between humans and land, and

  • The simple gesture of touching the earth.

Touching the earth is a gesture that runs deep in my imaginative meshwork; it is a nod to the Bhumisparsha mudra, calling the earth to witness. This is a deeply reverential expression of honoring the earth and stepping into our awareness of Oneness, and, therein, stepping into the responsibility of upholding and embodying that honor. The grasses growing up from the touch of the fingers express that humans and nature are not separate, and that our touch can be one that expresses care and protection. Today's hegemony of colonizing beliefs function through systems of separation and superiority, justifying dishonorable acts of exploitation and extraction. Recovering from this will involve the steady healing of our beliefs, actions, and embodiment. I felt that this particular expression fit well with the vision and mission of HNLF, as it is subtle, expansive, and inclusive, and able to encompass the broad range of people who will be involved in this work.

Moselle Singh (Drawn from Water) is a Punjabi-American artist from Iowa with a background in agroecology and biodiversity regeneration. They celebrate, honor, and defend their relationship with life through art www.mosellesingh.com.