The water at the two-story home of the Mendota Mdewakanton Dakota Community hasn't been working for weeks. The garage door looks like a wrecking ball could have hit it. The wood foundation of the sweat lodge, which is supposed to serve as a spiritual haven, is left exposed without a tarp.
Tribal council members think they have enough money to pay the rent for the Mendota house that they've been using as a community center through October. But if they aren't awarded a grant in the next couple of months, they don't know what they'll do after that.
"Our water's been out for almost a month, and it's ridiculous," said Jim Anderson, cultural chairman for the community. "These are the kind of struggles that we have all the time just to keep a place open that has our information, that has the history."
The community center serves in many capacities to the 300-member Mendota Dakota community. It's where members hold tribal council meetings, teach Dakota language classes and plan preservation efforts.
But even after the landlord reduced the monthly rent from $1,200 to $800 in July, money and time are running out. Funds from a three-year, $60,000 grant from the Otto Bremer Foundation are dwindling. Tribal council members are applying for another grant from the foundation this month.
"If things don't change, we'll probably be moving somewhere else at the end of October," said tribal council member Sharon Lennartson.
The location of the community center, which is up for sale by the owner, is important to the group, said some of its tribal council members. The place nearby where the Minnesota and Mississippi rivers meet is where the Mendota Dakota traditionally believe life began, Anderson said.
"It's the place of our origin, the place of our genesis, the place where the Creator put us," he said.