The American Indian Church, also known as the Chicago Indian Bible Church, was founded in the early 1960's as a place for Native people in the city to worship. Although the church faced issues in retaining membership and having a permanent location, it was still linked to other Native led institutions in the city. Board members for Native organizations, including American Indian Center (AIC) board member Roger Harper, attended the church and served on its board of trustees. The church also met at the AIC in the late 1960s and early 1970s.
In 1964 the church's choir was featured in a segment of "Wonderful World" on WKTV on Channel 2, a local Chicago station. The choir performed alongside representatives of the American Indian Center to highlight the presence of Native Americans in the city.
Serving as the first Native American reverend for the church in his tenure that began in 1972, Duane Begay (Navajo/Chippewa) sought to expand the outreach the church had already been doing. Having attended the church when it began in the 1960s, Begay believed there was a need for Native ministers, later graduating from Moody Bible Institute in the late 1960s and earning a master's degree in education. Begay also served as an instructor at Moody Bible Institute, teaching about the Native community in the city while also advocating for more resources to assist them.
The church, in its core goals, was another Native institution that saw mutual aid as essential to the Native community in the Chicago. In addition to gathering community members together, it also published a newsletter, The Chieftan, that helped publicized community events.
"Indian Affairs Plan Coffee. The Daily Herald. Chicago, Illinois. August 27, 1964. p. 64.
"Indian Choir Will Sing on TV Program." Chicago, Tribune. Chicago, Illinois. January 2, 1964. p. 68.
"Indians Elect New Officers, Directors." Chicago Tribune. Chicago, Illinois. February 13, 1972. p. 160.
James B. LaGrand Indian Metropolis: Native Americans in Chicago, 1945-75. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2002. p. 231.
Taylor, Lynn. "Indian church here may lack building, but not faith." Chicago Tribune. Chicago, Illinois. May 12, 1973.