By Rev. Cindy Geisen, LSURJ FaithAs the child and niece of union laborers, I was raised with a heart for justice. Yet, I am a relative newcomer to the organized, public work for justice. I am learning so much - and still have so much to learn. At the end of a tumultuous, life-sapping and life-giving year, I’d like to share what I have gleaned about the multi-faceted work of justice.
Justice nudges us outward. It challenges us to pay heed to the experiences of people whose experiences differ from our own; to ferret out the histories we were never taught and the stories we never have been told; to open our eyes to the interlocking systems of injustice in which we are each complicit. Justice moves us to action. Writing letters to legislators and editors; wielding our purchasing power wisely by patronizing businesses who fairly compensate their employees and boycotting those who do not; participating in marches and kitchen-table conversations are but a few ways to do justice in the public square. Justice is spiritual work aimed at our own liberation as well as the liberation of all creation. Systemic racism diminishes all of us. Without for one moment equating the suffering of white people with the deep, ongoing suffering of our siblings of color, this work calls us to acknowledge that racism leaves no one unscathed. The work of justice therefore, requires us to sit with the consequences of racism…to examine the generational costs of averting our eyes from the suffering of others…to wonder how racist systems have shaped our relationships and our way of being in the world. The work of justice is, as Rev. angel Kyodo williams writes, “about allowing people the space and opportunity for discomfort so that they can touch their own suffering”…lest when people feel threatened…”they go back to the places of unaddressed suffering and… racialized behavior, like micro-aggressions, and so on, continue…”* One of the many things I appreciate about working with LSURJ is that there are so many ways to participate in the work for justice - all of them necessary and valuable. If, like me, you are a relative newcomer to this work; if you’re wondering where you might begin; if you’d like to broach the topic of racism with your friends, members of your family, your neighborhood, or your faith community - we are here to lend a hand. Members of LSURJ - Faith will be happy to talk with you, to share ideas, resources and offer our support on your journey. Contact us at: [email protected] * From Radical Dharma: Talking Race, Love, and Liberation, by Rev. angel Kyodo williams, Lama Rod Owens, with Jasmine Syedullah, Ph.D,
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Louisville Standing Up for Racial Justice (LSURJ) joins with countless other POC-led and other organizations working for collective liberation to strongly condemn the armed white supremacist insurrection that took place at the Capitol in Washington, D.C., on January 6, 2021.
It is particularly important for us to condemn this act, as news arises that Louisville was an organizing and mustering point for this display of hatred. This act of white backlash is part of a deep pattern in our nation’s history when Black led struggle leads to shifts in power. From the rise of Jim Crow and the KKK after Reconstruction to Cointelpro and the War on Drugs after the height of the civil rights movement, the attack in D.C. has deep roots. This particular attack has been in the making for years, and it was incited by many – from Donald Trump, his family, and closest advisors; to federal, state, and local government officials; to currently serving and retired law enforcement personnel; and others. We demand that all those who incited or participated in this violent white nationalist attack be held accountable for their actions. This event was planned and orchestrated by numerous white nationalist and white supremacist groups working in concert. The growth of these groups is directly related to their fear of losing power and privilege as the nation “wakes up” to the insidious lies of institutional racism and what it really means for Black and Brown Lives to Matter. The January 6 insurrection was an act of fear, desperation, racism, and bigotry. It must be a wake-up call to moderates and centrists who think that these groups just constitute a harmless fringe movement that can be ignored. They cannot. They must be aggressively opposed through the commitment on the part of those of us who are white, to dig deeply into organizing more and more white people for racial justice. When we fail to engage majority white communities in why joining with a multi racial change struggle benefits us too, we cede that territory and those conversations to those who stoke racism. White supremacy systems must be dismantled by white folks, by whom and for whom they were constructed. It is critical that white people work collectively, through organizations such as LSURJ and other racial justice efforts, to fight against white supremacy in all its forms, and to work together with Black and other communities of color to achieve true justice and equity in our society for everyone. Make no mistake: failure to speak out against racism is tantamount to complicity with that system. LSURJ is working to grow the base of white folks challenging white supremacy in all its forms. We call on others to join us. Please join SURJ National on Wednesday night, January 13 at 8 pm ET, for a webinar on white backlash. Register at bit.ly/whitebacklash. If the webinar reaches capacity, it will also be live-streamed on Facebook. The Louisville chapter of SURJ hosts online meetings the second Tuesday of every month at 7pm ET. Sign up for LSURJ emails to receive news and registration links for the meetings. Jamillya Martin, Savannah Hughes, Kelly McCall and Phil Lloyd-Sidle, Opinion contributors. This op-ed was published in the Courier-Journal on November 10, 2020. Contributors included some local LSURJ members.
This past Thursday evening, Metro Council had an opportunity to boldly state it will not cater to the whims of the Fraternal Order of Police. However, it did not do so. Rather, the tail looks like it's wagging the dog. Metro Council chose the route of no conflict and failed to take decisive action toward redressing major systemic wrongs. The Collective Bargaining Agreement between the city and the FOP, approved by Metro Council on Thursday in a 16-10 vote, demonstrates we have not learned anything from the last nine months of 2020 (let alone past years) regarding police violence, misconduct and a severely deteriorated state of community relations. The timing is bad. The city’s whopping budget that already funds law enforcement is out of whack. We actually — as a city — pay more to the Louisville Metro Police Department, juvenile detention and our county jail, than any other aspect of municipal life. Over half of our city budget goes to law enforcement. By those numbers, one could not naively wonder if we are living in a version of a police state. Not education, not job creation, not public health, not housing, not wealth development for Black or other poor neighborhoods, none receive the same measure of tax dollars as is dedicated to law enforcement. We are a city that appears to want a quick fix (and a deadly one at that) to solving the deep social problems and poverty that so many are enduring. ... or dying from. And we are pouring money down a dangerous drain instead. Unfortunately, the contract continues the hemorrhaging of tax dollars. Rather than take our time to develop a more sound contract slated for June 2021, Metro Council chose to approve a temporary contract without public hearings or a more studied approach. This not real policy but currying favor with the FOP. As thousands in these same months have been losing wages and jobs, facing health crises and evictions and falling into greater insecurity, the city continues to open the faucets to the police. This is a structural problem: We are dedicating taxpayers’ money to a structure that does not deliver safety and well-being. Decades of research indicate individuals and communities are safe not because they have a militarized police force, but because the communities have resources. Sadly, as well, this contract fails to deliver regarding the legitimate concerns of police misconduct. The national organization Campaign Zero has identified six key safeguards that municipal police contracts may or may not contain which address the problems of police (i.e. employee) misconduct and accountability. If a city is not careful or attentive to these six major areas, it becomes nearly impossible to hold police accountable for their actions. The six safeguards are:
Campaign Zero has made a study of 81 of the United States’ top 100 cities. Louisville is one of only six major six cities in the country that have failed to include any of these six safeguards in its police contract. Instead, we cloak our policing in secrecy. We must change this. We missed an opportunity with this temporary, short-term and unnecessary contract. As we deal with larger budgetary issues for Louisville and anticipate a new round of longer-term negotiations with the FOP in the new year (scheduled for approval in June), we must dedicate ourselves to a deeper and broader vision of community safety for all. Public spending cannot keep increasing for law enforcement while diminishing the funding and commitment to the deeper issues of equality and justice and people’s suffering. Jamillya Martin, District 6; Savannah Hughes, District 10; Kelly McCall, District 17; and Phil Lloyd-Sidle, District 9. This past summer, SURJ convened a cohort of multi-discipline white artists across the country who were responding to the call to create art by white artists and cultural creators for white people to help inspire and sustain white folks in the long-haul work of justice work. This website, White artists for racial justice!, is live. Both the site and the Instagram account connected to it is a showcasing of the incredible work these artists did together. *If you'd be willing to donate some time to help with image descriptions on the website of the visual art for accessibility purposes, please email [email protected]* Here are additional resources from SURJ National: - The toolkit, "Call to Action and Creation for White Cultural Workers" that includes prompts, background, and support for white artists making anti-racist work - Sign up to join SURJ's artist group - Sign up for SURJ's work on the Senate run-off races in Georgia - Donate to SURJ and New Georgia Project - Sign up to get email updates from SURJ
Shared by Carla Wallace with LSURJ
As the Trump campaign attempts to halt ballot counting and interfere with election results, Organizing White Men for Collective Liberation (OWMCL) is launching a #WhiteMenRejectTrump campaign. Polling exit data shows that this election millions of white men left the Trump base, but we are still the largest demographic that supports Trump. With this campaign, white men from communities across the country - rural Kentucky, urban Los Angeles, Northern New Mexico - are joining together to vocally reject Trump and all that he represents. Check out and share the campaign launch video and please follow and share the #WhiteMenRejectTrump website, Facebook, Twitter and Instagram pages and posts! Michael Harrington, one of the campaign spokespeople from rural Kentucky, explains why he rejects Trump: “Donald Trump is one of those folks who looks down on us. It's insulting. He's just like every other billionaire and big corporate outsider. They come into our towns just to try and screw us over to make some money. We're tired of it. We aren't going to take it anymore. It's our birthright as mountain people to fight back. So that's what we're doing. That's why we reject Trump.” Over the last week, six spokespeople and a team of communications support volunteers have been working together to share our personal stories and to build a campaign website and social media content. Late at night after work, as we’ve been developing the campaign, we’ve been talking about all the ways that we were taught as white men to care for our families, to protect our communities, and to fight alongside vulnerable people. As veteran Garett Reppenhagen explains: “The bonds that I made with my fellow soldiers in the U S military were created on the backbone of caring for one another and really accepting each other, despite our differences. Donald Trump doesn't exemplify those military values that I learned in basic training; my unit wouldn't follow him across the parking lot. He makes our values morally bankrupt and I hope that isn't the future for the United States of America. I hope we can be proud of who we are as Americans.” After a few initial conversations our team quickly began to build trust and open up about the pain and struggles we’ve experienced as white men. Josh Schott described the struggles of his white male friends, “Men are the loneliest, most isolated, depressed group of people I know. And how this plays out in Montana, in my community, there is drug and alcohol abuse, depression and suicide that white men experience. I’ve lost 10 white male friends over the course of 13 years to drug and alcohol related incidents. Donald Trump is tapping into our very real pain and anger, he’s using our pain against ourselves and against our neighbors and communities. We need to choose a different path for what it means to be a white man.” The campaign will exist for as long as necessary in the post-election period to counter the message that most white men support Trump and will stand by his efforts to cling to power and undermine the election. We reject Trump and we encourage white men who feel the same to join us. Go to our website, share your stories. Together we can show this country and the world that we can be strong, compassionate, white men that fight for liberty and justice for all people. Check out and share the campaign launch video and please follow and share the #WhiteMenRejectTrump website, Facebook, Twitter and Instagram pages and posts! |
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