Clyde Bellecourt was the seventh of twelve children born to his parents, Charles and Angeline, on the
White Earth Indian Reservation in northern
Minnesota. Among his older siblings was brother
Vernon Bellecourt. The reservation was impoverished and his home had no running water or electricity. By the time he was released four years later, the Bellecourt family had moved to Minneapolis in the 1950s, under the
Indian Relocation Act of 1956 whereby the federal government encouraged moves to settings where there might be more job opportunities. At the age of 25, Bellecourt was transferred to
Stillwater Prison in the eponymous city of
Minnesota, where he served out the remainder of his sentence. There he met numerous other Native Americans, many of them also
Ojibwe. Among those were
Eddie Benton-Banai (Ojibwe, 1931–2020), who had started a prison cultural program called the American Indian Folklore Group and
Dennis Banks (Ojibwe, 1937–2017). After working together in prison, they decided to create a similar program in Minneapolis, to aid urban Indians through exposure to their history, traditional culture, and spirituality. ==American Indian Movement==