Bertrand and her partner
John Trudell founded the All Tribes Foundation to support the cultural and economic survival of Native peoples. By 2007, the foundation had issued over $800,000 in grants to reservation-based programs that strengthen tribal ways of life and safeguard a future for Native communities. On
International Women's Day in 2003, Bertrand and Trudell produced a benefit concert for Afghan women refugees in conjunction with the
United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees. Bertrand, who was diagnosed with
ovarian cancer in 1999, also founded the Give Love Give Life organization with Trudell; their objective was to raise public consciousness about ovarian and other gynecological cancers through music. The first Give Love Give Life concert was held in February 2004 at
The Roxy in
West Hollywood. Bertrand and Trudell worked to organize strategic support in the music and film community for
Johanna's Law, legislation to fund national outreach and education about the signs and symptoms of gynecological cancers, which was signed into law on January 12, 2007. To benefit the Women's Cancer Research Institute at
Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, a second Give Love Give Life concert was held at the
Gibson Amphitheater in Los Angeles in February 2007, a month after Bertrand died from cancer. == Personal life ==