7 Directions of Service is an Indigenous-led group focused on environmental preservation and protecting what such groups view as sacred homelands. The group opposed the Mountain Valley Pipeline and Southgate Extension for five years, advocated for rights-of-nature laws in North Carolina, and its co-founder Crystal Cavalier-Heck co-authored bills to grant legal rights to the Haw River and Dan River while addressing watershed community impacts. 1 2
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7 Directions of Service focuses on protecting sites it deems sacred, advocating “rights of nature” laws to protect certain natural features, and establishing centers for land, language, and culture based on the traditions of the Yesa:sahį-speaking Native American tribal groups. The group offers ongoing youth programs, rites of passage, and Yesa culture classes, while building a hub at Yesa Farms for reviving Indigenous agricultural, cultural, and leadership practices. The group connects these cultural preservations to “environmental justice” and climate-change mitigation. The group advocates “LandBack” to return land to Indigenous control, and blames “racial capitalist economies” for damaging life and relations. Campaigns include sacred-site protection, “rights of nature,” and opposition to projects like Buc-ee’s. 1
Activists from 7 Directions of Service, the North Carolina Environmental Justice Network, and local residents protested the Mebane City Council’s approval of a Buc-ee’s gas station in North Carolina, aiming to halt construction due to its location, while calling for opposition to “environmental racism” and claiming harm to public health and wealth. 7 Directions of Service commissioned the 34-page report “Buc-ee’s Burden,” authored by journalists Lewis Raven Wallace and Sue Sturgis, which asserted that such facilities contribute to air pollution, offer low wages, and rely on public highways. 3 4
7 Directions of Service was established in 2024, and financial information on the nonprofit was not yet available as of 2025. 5
As of August 2025, co-founder Crystal A. Cavalier-Keck was the executive director of 7 Directions of Service. A citizen of the Occaneechi Band of the Saponi Nation living in Mebane, North Carolina, Cavalier-Keck has experience in strategic intelligence and cybersecurity, including roles as a counterintelligence analyst with the Department of Defense at Quantico, Virginia, and as an analyst with the Department of Homeland Security. She earned a doctorate in organizational leadership from the University of Dayton, where her research examined the “social justice” aspects of missing and murdered Indigenous women linked to gas and oil pipelines. As of 2025, Cavalier-Keck was pursuing a master’s in Indigenous Peoples Law at the University of Oklahoma. 2
As of 2025, Cavalier-Keck held the role of resilient hub coordinator for the Nor Cal Resilience Network and worked as radio show host and producer for “La Onda Bajita” on KPFA. Cavalier-Keck chairs the Environmental Justice Committee for the NAACP. She participated in the 2020 fall cohort of the Sierra Club’s Gender Equity and Environment Program and the Women’s Earth Alliance’s Accelerator for Grassroots Women Environmental Leaders. 6
She was elected to the North Carolina Political Women’s Caucus in 2009, served as treasurer and then president of the Cumberland County Young Democrats in 2010 and 2011, chaired the YDNC Military/Veterans Caucus, worked with Operation Free on climate change national security risks and clean energy in 2011, founded and chaired the North Carolina Democratic Native American Caucus in 2019, and ran for U.S. Congress in North Carolina’s 4th District in 2022. As of 2025, she was a chapter director of the 17 Rivers American Indian Movement and an adjunct professor in social sciences at Salem College, and held positions on boards like Movement Rights and Haw River Assembly, while being a Sequoyah Fellow with the American Indian Science and Engineering Society and a lifetime member of the National Congress for American Indians. 2
All-time grants received statistics from Candid dataset:
Selection of highest value grants received from the last seven years:
| Amount | Year | Funder | Subject |
|---|---|---|---|
| $5,500 | 2025 | Collective Heritage Institute | FOR GENERAL SUPPORT – YESAH TRIBUNAL |
| $5,000 | 2023 | GLOBAL GREENGRANTS FUND INC | EASTERN WOODLAND LACROSSE/ 7 DIRECTIONS OF SERVICE will use funding to increase visibility and understanding of issues that are and potentially could affect this BIPOC, and low economic community and are also empowering communities to have their say over decisions that affect their lives, their towns, cities and neighborhoods. Oil pipelines in NC are negatively effecting indigenous communities and connecting the communities about the pipeline going through, and ultimately canceling the MVP/MVP Southgate is the most pertinent issue. A major current concern is the threat of federal deregulation against bedrock environmental laws like the National Environmental Policy Act and Clean Water Act, which many tribes and frontline communities depend on to engage with the fossil fuel projects proposed in their own backyards. 7 Directions of Service plans to educate community members on the most recent developments regarding the proposed MVP/MVP Southgate extension in their area as well as the environmental impact a successful southgate extension will have on their community, conduct a property owners rights forum, and advocate for grassroots mobilization against MVP. Funds will support personnel, supplies, travel, and marketing. This project serves women, youth, and indigenous populations as well as people living with disabilities and other gender identities. |