As a program of a non-profit organization, the One Nation Film Festival relies on the generosity of friends. From direct financial support to providing goods and services, there are many ways to make a tax-deductible contribution.
Individuals sponsoring films, tributes, and special programs are vital to the festival’s success as well.
CORPORATE SPONSORSHIPS allow a company to be linked to the identity of individual festival venues and events. Or, for greater visibility and title credit, companies may choose to be a Presenting Sponsor. Certain contribution levels allow for distribution of goods and literature to our festival attendees.
FOUNDATIONS also supply invaluable assistance. By donating to the ONFF, there are many options to match a foundation’s objectives.
Our Sponsors
Partnerships and Honorable Mentions
Frank Waln
Frank Waln is an award winning Sicangu Lakota Hip Hop artist, producer, and performer from the Rosebud Reservation in South Dakota. A recipient of the Gates Millennium Scholarship, Waln attended Columbia College Chicago where he received a BA in Audio Arts and Acoustics. Waln’s awards include three Native American Music Awards, the National Center for American Indian Enterprise Development 2014 Native American 40 Under 40, and the 2014 Chicago Mayor’s Award for Civic Engagement. He has been featured on Buzzfeed’s 12 Native Americans Who Are Making a Difference, USA Today, ESPN, and MTV’s Rebel Music Native America. Waln has written for various publications including Decolonization: Indigeneity, Education, and Society and The Guardian. Frank Waln travels the world spreading hope and inspiration through performance and workshops focusing on self-empowerment and the pursual of dreams.
Native Max Magazine is a Native-owned and operated, bi-monthly Print+Digital magazine that features style (men/women), health & fitness, art, culture & education, current events, news & views, pop culture and entertainment, of both Indian Country and First Nations. Native Max Magazine is one of the most honest, reputable Native-owned and operated magazines still on the market today. All staff writers, contributors and photographers of the Native Max Magazine team are all Native American and First Nations members of Canada. Native Max Magazine has been successfully marketed as a cross between today’s popular fashion magazines and top Indian Country publications. Native Max has also been classified as “…first of its kind…” and “…unlike anything seen before…” by major newspapers and reporters around the world.