racial justice Archives - The Austin Common https://theaustincommon.com/tag/racial-justice/ Network of people interested in information, events, and resources related to Austin and the environment. Thu, 08 Jun 2023 17:49:13 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.2 Free Your Mind Juneteenth Lecture Series with Dr. Annette Gordon-Reed https://theaustincommon.com/event/free-your-mind-juneteenth-lecture-series-with-dr-annette-gordon-reed/ Mon, 19 Jun 2023 18:00:00 +0000 https://theaustincommon.com/?post_type=tribe_events&p=50156 This year the Carver Museum is teaming up with the City of Austin Equity Office to present a week of dynamic conversations with thought leaders and public scholars as part of the Free Your Mind Juneteenth Lecture Series!  Join us as we close out the Free...

The post Free Your Mind Juneteenth Lecture Series with Dr. Annette Gordon-Reed appeared first on The Austin Common.

]]>
This year the Carver Museum is teaming up with the City of Austin Equity Office to present a week of dynamic conversations with thought leaders and public scholars as part of the Free Your Mind Juneteenth Lecture Series! 

Join us as we close out the Free Your Mind Lecture series on Monday, June 19, 2023, historian, legal scholar, New York Times Bestseller, and Pulitzer Prize-Winning Author Dr. Annette Gordon-Reed, will speak about her book, On Juneteenth, followed by a Q&A facilitated by Dr. Edmund T. Gordon from 1:00 pm – 3:00 pm.

SCHEDULE:
Doors at 12:30PM. Parking is available on site.
Presentation and Q&A from 1:00-2:30PM
Reception 2:30-3:00PM

Monday, June 19 1-3pm
Carver Museum and Genealogy Center
1165 Angelina Street, Austin TX 78702

The post Free Your Mind Juneteenth Lecture Series with Dr. Annette Gordon-Reed appeared first on The Austin Common.

]]>
Juneteenth Austin Family Cookout and Music Festival https://theaustincommon.com/event/juneteenth-austin-family-cookout-and-music-festival/ Sat, 17 Jun 2023 20:00:00 +0000 https://theaustincommon.com/?post_type=tribe_events&p=50158 Join us on Saturday, June 17, 2023, from 3:00PM – 9:00PM at the Carver Museum will host a community cookout and musical festival in the historic Rosewood Neighborhood. From 3:00PM – 6:00PM, attendees will listen to curated musical selections courtesy of KAZI Radio and eat free smoked...

The post Juneteenth Austin Family Cookout and Music Festival appeared first on The Austin Common.

]]>
Join us on Saturday, June 17, 2023, from 3:00PM – 9:00PM at the Carver Museum will host a community cookout and musical festival in the historic Rosewood Neighborhood. From 3:00PM – 6:00PM, attendees will listen to curated musical selections courtesy of KAZI Radio and eat free smoked BBQ prepared by veteran pitmasters, and donated from Meyer’s Elgin Sausage, Micklethwait Craft Meats, Distant Relatives, Franklin’s BBQ, and Whole Foods. Lady Joy will host the mid-day outdoor festivities that include vendors, carnival games, and raffles for all ages. Inside, visitors can enjoy an array of educational workshops, film screenings, and self-guided tours.

New this year, is an art market and interactive activation curated by Rich’s Art Gallery, outfitted with vendors, art activities for all ages, live painting, and more! A cooling station and water will be provided by Austin Energy, and water activities for the whole family will be stationed throughout the event.

At 6:00PM, host Saul Paul will kick off the music festival with opening performances by Austin Samba Sonya Javette, Stretch Musik, and DJ Kay Kali. At 8:00PM, the funky, rocking, dancing, soulful mega band GAP X- The Band brought to life by original global touring members of the legendary group “The Gap Band” will serenade Juneteenth festival goers for 90-minutes with chart-topping hits like Outstanding and You Dropped a Bomb on Me.

 

SCHEDULE:

Genealogy Center
3:00-5:00 – Screening of The Anderson Yellow Jackets followed by  Q&A with director/producer Michael Emery

Front Plaza
3:00-6:00 – Community Vending/Tabling

Inside the Museum
3:30-4:30 – Student Icons: Youth Sewing (session 1)

3:00-4:00 – Creative Action: Juneteenth Storytime

3:00-5:00 – Joyous Tutoring: Youth Reading Assessment

4:00-5:30 – GABPW Workshop: “Lights, Camera, Action!” -Teaching leaders how to stay ahead of the competition by creating educational videos

5:00-6:00 – Student Icons: Youth Sewing (sesssion 2)

Freedom Plaza/Lawn
3:00-7:30 – Chill & Grill: Sponsored by Mickelthwait’s, Meyers Sausage, Distant Relatives, Franklins, Whole Foods, and cooked up by a Grill Master

3:00-6:00 – Raffle Prizes, face painting, balloon twisting, and more!

3:00-6:00 – Water Programs: Kiddie pools, water guns/balloons and more!

3:00-6:00 – Rich’s Gallery Art Market: Vendors/Live Painting/Interactive Activities

Main Stage
3:00-3:10 – Welcome Announcements

3:00-6:00 – Lady Joy Hosts

3:00-6:00 – KAZI Untapped DJ Set and Announcements

5:30-6:00 – Austin Samba Performance

6:00-9:00 – SaulPaul Hosts

6:00-6:10 –  Lift Every Voice and sing with Rochelle Snearl and Deric J. Lewis

6:30-6:40 – Kay Cali DJ Set

6:40-7:10 – Stretch Musik Band

7:30-9:00 – GAP X – The Band!

The post Juneteenth Austin Family Cookout and Music Festival appeared first on The Austin Common.

]]>
Stay Black and Live Juneteenth Community Kickback and Dance Party https://theaustincommon.com/event/stay-black-and-live-juneteenth-community-kickback-and-dance-party/ Fri, 16 Jun 2023 23:00:00 +0000 https://theaustincommon.com/?post_type=tribe_events&p=50154 Join us on Friday, June 16th, from 6-9PM for a multi-generational community kickback and dance party featuring a sensory station powered by Creative Action. We’ll be double-dutching, giving away glow sticks, kites, bubble guns, and more to attendees under a neon tent. The hostess with the mostest,...

The post Stay Black and Live Juneteenth Community Kickback and Dance Party appeared first on The Austin Common.

]]>
Join us on Friday, June 16th, from 6-9PM for a multi-generational community kickback and dance party featuring a sensory station powered by Creative Action. We’ll be double-dutching, giving away glow sticks, kites, bubble guns, and more to attendees under a neon tent. The hostess with the mostest, Queen Deelah, will be leading the festivities, and high-energy sets by DJ Cysum and DJ Dontizle will keep the vibes bright before closing out the party with a special edition of BodyRockATX with Chaka, Qi Dada, and DJ Chroizo Funk – if you know, you know!!

Whether you’re new to the party, or a seasoned veteran on the dance floor, we want to see the #carvercommunity movin’ and groovin’. Dance battles at the bottom of every DJ block, so bring your crew and give it all you got!

SCHEDULE:
5:30PM- 6:00PM- Doors open/ guests arrive. Free street parking available.
6:15PM-7:15PM- DJ Cysum, Dance Battle #1- 7:00PM-7:15PM
7:15PM-8:15PM- DJ Dontizle, Dance Battle #2- 8:00PM-8:15PM
8:15PM-9:15PM- BodyRock ATX, Dance Battle #3 -9:15-9:30
6:00PM-9:00PM – Creative Action Sensory Station all night!

Thursday, Friday, June16, 6-9PM
Carver Museum and Genealogy Center
1165 Angelina Street, Austin TX 78702

The post Stay Black and Live Juneteenth Community Kickback and Dance Party appeared first on The Austin Common.

]]>
Free Your Mind Juneteenth Lecture Series with Pamela Dawson https://theaustincommon.com/event/free-your-mind-juneteenth-lecture-series-with-pamela-dawson/ Mon, 12 Jun 2023 23:00:00 +0000 https://theaustincommon.com/?post_type=tribe_events&p=50165 This year the Carver Museum is teaming up with the City of Austin Equity Office to present a week of dynamic conversations with thought leaders and public scholars as part of the Free Your Mind Juneteenth Lecture Series! This one’s for the music lovers…so everyone!!! Kicking off...

The post Free Your Mind Juneteenth Lecture Series with Pamela Dawson appeared first on The Austin Common.

]]>
This year the Carver Museum is teaming up with the City of Austin Equity Office to present a week of dynamic conversations with thought leaders and public scholars as part of the Free Your Mind Juneteenth Lecture Series! This one’s for the music lovers…so everyone!!!

Kicking off the week-long educational series on Monday, June 12, 2023, is Grammy Award-winning, Desoto, Texas, high school music teacher, Pamela Dawson. Using negro spirituals, Dawson will deliver an interactive lecture and sing-along that will educate attendees on African-American contributions to the sonic art form.

SCHEDULE:
5:30pm- 6:00pm- Doors open/ guests arrive. Parking is available on site.
6:00pm-7:30pm- Lecture by Pamela Dawson, followed by Q&A facilitated by University of Texas Associate Professor of Music, Dr. Charles Daniel Carson.
7:30pm-8:00pm- Reception

Monday, June 12 6-8pm
Carver Museum and Genealogy Center
1165 Angelina Street, Austin TX 78702

The post Free Your Mind Juneteenth Lecture Series with Pamela Dawson appeared first on The Austin Common.

]]>
Resilient Communities at Earth Day ATX https://theaustincommon.com/resilient-communities-at-earth-day-atx/ https://theaustincommon.com/resilient-communities-at-earth-day-atx/#respond Fri, 22 Apr 2022 01:34:51 +0000 https://theaustincommon.com/?p=47995 About The Author This guest post was written by Janis Bookout, Executive Director of Earth Day Austin & one of the organizers of Community Resilience Trust, a grassroots coalition that came together in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, with the goal of making Austin a...

The post Resilient Communities at Earth Day ATX appeared first on The Austin Common.

]]>
Austinites You Should Know

About The Author

This guest post was written by Janis Bookout, Executive Director of Earth Day Austin & one of the organizers of Community Resilience Trust, a grassroots coalition that came together in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, with the goal of making Austin a more equitable city for everyone.

Action Items

Action Box

Attend Earth Day ATX on Saturday, April 23rd.

Earth Day ATX is back, and for those of us who have carried the torch, it’s quite the win. 

 

The Earth Day torch has been passed from organizer to organizer for decades. Since its inception in 1970, Earth Day has brought many things – rallies, marches, clean-up events, and yes, festivals. When the torch was passed to me, I had no idea what was coming next.

 

In 2018, we started a new organization to host Earth Day ATX when the funder behind the previous organization decided to stop funding it. I had been working for that organization, and I lost my job. It wasn’t a smart time to start something new. But we did. We started over from nothing, building a new board and a new mission: putting equity at the center of environmentalism.

 

And we have carried that torch through a devastating weather event in 2019 and despite the odds, covered all requested refunds and honored all of our agreements. Then, just as it looked like we might recoup our losses in the 50th anniversary event in 2020, we shuttered for the pandemic. Recognizing the value our network could bring to pandemic response, we pivoted, and two days later, started Community Resilience Trust, a multi-racial collaborative focused on operationalizing equity through disaster response. 

 

And now, after all that, Earth Day ATX is returning to the Huston-Tillotson Campus, and that torch is brighter than ever. Why were we determined to keep it burning? Because what is at stake is too precious not to.

You see, Earth Day ATX is a public platform. It’s a venue where people can be seen and heard about matters related to our environment, and the harm that impacts us. Who should be included in that platform? Whose issues should we pay attention to?

 

When you look at the spectrum of issues and innovations and movements that fall under the environmental umbrella, it sometimes feels like all the issues are competing. And in a way they are – they compete for attention, for funding, and for influence on people’s behavior. It can feel disjointed, overwhelming even. Whether it’s policy change or behavior change, or a new product–every company, every organization, has something they want you to do.

 

And the truth is, despite efforts to the contrary, the environmental movement has also remained very segregated. Events like Earth Day have for the most part been very white spaces. Why? It’s certainly not a reflection of people’s care for the environment. In general, communities of color have a much gentler impact on the environment than white communities do. Recycling, gardening, conservation – historically, they’ve always led the way.

 

Equity should not be *part* of environmentalism, it should be at the center. Why? Because without it, we are lost in the woods of our own culture–unable to see the forest for the trees.

 

So many aspects of our “American” ideology – individualism, productivity, urgency, expertise, innovation, growth – have roots in a society built on extraction and exploitation. Privileged wealth (in most cases white wealth) was built on this extraction and exploitation, and you could say that these ideologies emerged as a validation or justification of that extraction and exploitation. Many of these same ideologies, however, are echoed in the mainstream (white) approach to environmentalism. In our urgency to solve environmental problems, we miss the value of community relationships. In our certainty that our idea is the best, we miss the value of diversity of life and cultural perspectives. When we elevate our pet issues, but don’t listen to what is directly impacting people in our own neighborhoods, we perpetuate the very root conditions that created environmental degradation in the first place. 

 

That’s why we have kept those embers alive – and why we are doing all this work, despite the challenges, to bring back this festival. 

This year’s theme is Communities: Resilience at the Center. Along with a diverse and authentic musical lineup from DJs and local musicians, good food and fun activities for kids, there will also be discussions about things that matter to our communities. Austin Pow Wow will present a movie and discussion. There will be storytelling from our community elders, and brave conversations on panels about resilience, what it means, and what’s in the way. I am particularly excited about the collaborative mural project from East Austin muralists Amada Castillo, Rich Samuel, and Ernesto Hernandez.

 

Resilience should not be about #(insert city)strong communities forced to survive conditions that affect them disproportionately harder than others. It should be about undoing the disproportionality itself. And that can only happen when everyone is heard in the process, and everyone is included in the solutions that impact them most.

 

The precious opportunity of the festival is to share the platform with all of our communities – to listen and build relationships for a better future here. This is why we must have equity at the center of environmentalism, why we should elevate and follow the leadership of communities of color and other communities impacted most by environmental degradation. Because it’s only when we start listening to the perspective of those who do not benefit from the status quo that we can ever hope to break through it.

Earth Day Map 2022

The post Resilient Communities at Earth Day ATX appeared first on The Austin Common.

]]>
https://theaustincommon.com/resilient-communities-at-earth-day-atx/feed/ 0
UWSA December 2021 Unlearning Circle https://theaustincommon.com/event/uwsa-december-2021-unlearning-circle/ Sat, 11 Dec 2021 16:00:00 +0000 https://theaustincommon.com/?post_type=tribe_events&p=47225 UWSA’s December 2021 Unlearning Circle will explore the People’s Institute principle: Undoing Racism, more specifically, Tensions Experienced by People Who Identify as White in Racial Justice Work. We can all agree that racism is harmful and we must work to eradicate it from ourselves and our systems....

The post UWSA December 2021 Unlearning Circle appeared first on The Austin Common.

]]>
UWSA’s December 2021 Unlearning Circle will explore the People’s Institute principle: Undoing Racism, more specifically, Tensions Experienced by People Who Identify as White in Racial Justice Work.

We can all agree that racism is harmful and we must work to eradicate it from ourselves and our systems. Undoing racism will be our topic for the December Unlearning Circle. This simple statement for messy, complicated and intersectional work is broad and we will be focusing on working as self-identifying “white” people as we explore some of the tensions we commonly experience. While our intentions are good, we often start down a path only to realize that we are engaging in practices that perpetuate racism. Sometimes, we encounter seemingly contradictory messages that leave us unsure how to proceed, that tempt us to drop out or paralyze us with fear of “getting it wrong”. The People’s Institute reminds us that Racism is the single most critical barrier to building effective coalitions for social change. How are we in accountable relationships when our actions and/or presence can be harmful in multi racial spaces? How do we balance compassion, care and universal love with holding each other accountable? How does the tension between our desire to act and not being sure about what to do, create a barrier to building effective coalitions?

Please join us this month to explore these confusing experiences and discuss what we can do to navigate these difficult situations so that we can be more effective co-conspirators.

The post UWSA December 2021 Unlearning Circle appeared first on The Austin Common.

]]>
AJC December General Body Meeting https://theaustincommon.com/event/ajc-december-general-body-meeting/ Wed, 08 Dec 2021 00:30:00 +0000 https://theaustincommon.com/?post_type=tribe_events&p=47226 If you want to learn more about the Austin Justice Coalition, you’ve come to the right place. Join us for our general body meeting where you can meet the team, learn what’s going on in the organization, how you can get involved, and hear from...

The post AJC December General Body Meeting appeared first on The Austin Common.

]]>
If you want to learn more about the Austin Justice Coalition, you’ve come to the right place.

Join us for our general body meeting where you can meet the team, learn what’s going on in the organization, how you can get involved, and hear from other community organizations.

Our general body meeting typically occurs on the first Tuesday of every month.

We are currently hosting our meetings virtually so please be sure to register on our zoom link!

The post AJC December General Body Meeting appeared first on The Austin Common.

]]>
Radical Readers Book Club With Author Marlon Peterson https://theaustincommon.com/event/radical-readers-book-club-with-author-marlon-peterson/ Sun, 29 Aug 2021 22:00:00 +0000 https://theaustincommon.com/?post_type=tribe_events&p=46653 Author Marlon Peterson will join Austin Justice Coalitions Radical Readers Book Club on Aug. 29th at 5PM to discuss and answer questions about his new book, Bird Uncaged: An Abolitionist’s Freedom Song. Since his decade of incarceration, Marlon has written, created programming, lectured, organized, and...

The post Radical Readers Book Club With Author Marlon Peterson appeared first on The Austin Common.

]]>
Author Marlon Peterson will join Austin Justice Coalitions Radical Readers Book Club on Aug. 29th at 5PM to discuss and answer questions about his new book, Bird Uncaged: An Abolitionist’s Freedom Song.

Since his decade of incarceration, Marlon has written, created programming, lectured, organized, and advocated alongside the formerly incarcerated, victims of gun violence, womxn, immigrants, and young people.

Marlon is the author of Bird Uncaged: An Abolitionist’s Freedom Song, host of the DEcarcerated Podcast, and owner of his own social impact endeavor, The Precedential Group Social Enterprises and its nonprofit arm, Be Precedential, Inc. His TED talk, “Am I not human? A call for criminal justice reform”, has amassed over 1.2 million views.

The post Radical Readers Book Club With Author Marlon Peterson appeared first on The Austin Common.

]]>
Why healthy air is important for everyone https://theaustincommon.com/why-healthy-air-is-important-for-everyone/ https://theaustincommon.com/why-healthy-air-is-important-for-everyone/#respond Thu, 06 May 2021 18:39:31 +0000 https://theaustincommon.com/?p=46106 About The Author This post was written by the City of Austin Office of Sustainability. Their mission is to protect and improve Austin’s quality of life now and for future generations by leading efforts to achieve net-zero community-wide greenhouse gas emissions, a healthy & just...

The post Why healthy air is important for everyone appeared first on The Austin Common.

]]>
Austinites You Should Know

About The Author

This post was written by the City of Austin Office of Sustainability. Their mission is to protect and improve Austin's quality of life now and for future generations by leading efforts to achieve net-zero community-wide greenhouse gas emissions, a healthy & just local food system, & a climate resilient and adaptive city.

Action Items

Action Box

Keep an eye out for Ozone Action Days this summer! Help protect vulnerable Austinites by avoiding driving in your car on those days.

This post is sponsored by the City of Austin Office of Sustainability. All Austin Common sponsors are screened by The Austin Common team to ensure they’re doing good for their employees, customers, our community, and the planet.

 

Inhale, exhale. The simple act of breathing is something that most of us have taken for granted at some point or another. But, breathing clean, fresh air is necessary for people to survive and thrive. Perhaps there is no better time to focus on air quality and respiratory health than during a global health crisis spurred by a disease that targets the lungs. 

 

Because of human-induced climate change, our air quality is in danger of becoming worse. Wildfires, one of the worst causes of air pollution, are happening more often due to our changing climate. Suffer from seasonal allergies? Climate change is making our allergy season worse and longer, too. And, hotter temperatures can lead to an increase in ozone, a harmful pollutant. 

 

Since it’s not always easy to “see” when the air quality is unhealthy, it’s helpful to know what causes poor air quality and what we can all do to keep our air clean.

The “bad” kind of ozone and particulates 

In Central Texas, our air quality is generally pretty good. However, in the summer, there are times when levels of “bad” ozone — called “ground-level ozone” — reach concentrations that can negatively affect public health. This type of ozone is created when sunlight triggers a chemical reaction between oxygen-containing molecules and pollution that comes from cars, power plants, factories, and other sources. When concentrations become high, “Ozone Action Days” are triggered. We typically have between 5-10 Ozone Action Days per year in Central Texas.

 

For sensitive populations, such as the very young or elderly, people with respiratory issues like asthma, and those who work outside, avoiding outdoor activity is recommended on Ozone Action Days. This is because ozone is a highly reactive molecule that can irritate and damage airways and make it difficult to breathe. On Ozone Action Days, people can help by avoiding traveling alone in a car, and instead, work from home or use a sustainable form of transportation. Conserving energy is also especially important on these days.

 

Another big contributor to air pollution is particulates — the fine and coarse particles that spew from construction sites and things that burn fuel, like cars, power plants, and wildfires. Particulates, unlike ozone, can cause health problems year-round. Like ozone, particulates have been linked to a worsening of lung problems, especially asthma. Both particulates and ozone also are associated with increased cardiovascular events, such as stroke and heart attack.

Knowing our history

In Austin, the City’s 1928 master plan segregated the city along racial lines and forcibly relocated Black and Hispanic/Latinx communities East of what is now IH-35. East Austin was then designated for industrial development, meaning communities of color living in this area were now more likely to live near a source of ground or air pollution. These health inequities still persist to this day, and low-income communities and communities of color are statistically more likely to suffer from asthma and other breathing disorders in our community.

 

Additionally, people who live near major roadways with higher concentrations of particulate matter, such as IH-35, are more likely to develop lung issues. Particulate pollution is also linked to cognitive decline in the elderly. This can have a big impact on people experiencing homelessness, for example. 

 

The ability to breathe clean air is a human right, and we must continue to work together to advocate for clean air in our community. We hope you’ll join us during Air Quality Awareness Week, May 3-7, to help spread the message about why air quality is so important for our health. You can check current air quality conditions in our area at www.airnow.gov and visit our website for more information.

The post Why healthy air is important for everyone appeared first on The Austin Common.

]]>
https://theaustincommon.com/why-healthy-air-is-important-for-everyone/feed/ 0
Happy Earth Day in the Middle of the Great Pause https://theaustincommon.com/happy-earth-day-in-the-middle-of-the-great-pause/ https://theaustincommon.com/happy-earth-day-in-the-middle-of-the-great-pause/#respond Fri, 23 Apr 2021 00:31:23 +0000 https://theaustincommon.com/?p=46054 About The Author Janis Bookout is the Executive Director of Earth Day Austin, as well as one of the organizers of Community Resilience Trust, a grassroots coalition that came together in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, with the goal of making Austin a more equitable...

The post Happy Earth Day in the Middle of the Great Pause appeared first on The Austin Common.

]]>
Austinites You Should Know

About The Author

Janis Bookout is the Executive Director of Earth Day Austin, as well as one of the organizers of Community Resilience Trust, a grassroots coalition that came together in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, with the goal of making Austin a more equitable city for everyone. Janis regularly contributes guest editorials & posts to The Austin Common. You can support her work by contributing to her Patreon account.

Action Items

Action Box

Janis recommends that on this unusual Earth Day, take the time to do one thing that nurtures and heals you.

If this year has not taught us the connection between environmentalism and justice, between our environment and society, I don’t know what will. 

 

Earlier this week, we heard the historic verdict of three guilty counts, signifying the yet-to-be-seen possibility of a cultural shift toward an equitable justice system. In the context of police brutality happening within hours of the verdict, and with racism and police brutality happening regularly in our own city, celebrating becomes problematic. 

 

What does this have to do with Earth Day? Well, everything. (Hint: keep reading.)

 

“Where are we in this moment of time? Where are we going?” Whether we are environmentalists or social justice advocates or both, those of us who wake up concerned about the state of our community, the state of the country, or the state of the world–we ask ourselves these questions all the time. For some of us, making the change we want to see in the world feels like pushing a resting train from behind, waiting for it to creak forward, hoping to eventually, someday see momentum grow. For others, it’s more like walking backwards, pushing back on an enormous moving train, trying to slow it to a stop. 

 

But all too often, focusing on our own passionate cause gives us myopic vision. We settle ourselves into silos, start small businesses or nonprofits, and start trying to convince ourselves and others that we have the solution. Pretty soon the train we are pushing is all about the sustainability of our personal cause. Can I keep the lights on? Can I pay my staff? Can I continue my work? How will I ever expand this movement if I can’t even win a grant proposal? 

 

Students of critical race theory will tell you that silos, saviorism, wanting to “expand” and thinking you have the solution are the symptoms of internalized white supremacy. What if the same saviorism that gets some of us (myself included) up in the morning is perhaps our biggest barrier to real change? What if our myopic view obscures our view of the world as it is, and therefore leaves us in a sisyphustic turmoil, expending our life’s energy on a lost cause? In that context, hope can begin to seem like an intoxicating lie.

 

Would you prefer that I say, “Happy Earth Day” in a positive tone? Sorry, I can’t. The truth is, I have given up positivity in honor of something I think is greater – but I will get to that (and hope) in a minute. I have come to the conclusion that to gain real hope, you have to give up the false version of it.

 

The world is not working, but our social system is working just as designed. We live in a world built to advantage white bodied people and disadvantage everyone else, growing more and more disproportionate along a continuum of skintone. The racially disproportionate outcomes of COVID-19 hospitalizations, deaths, testing and vaccination distribution should not, at this point, surprise anyone. Even the funding of nonprofit organizations is completely inequitable, despite the fact that people get better outcomes from services provided by people who look like them. And when storm Uri hit, our startling lack of response to communities that waited up to 6 days for water, even after roads were clear, is not really that startling. 

 

That’s why last year, when we cancelled the Earth Day ATX festival, we started Community Resilience Trust, a collaborative effort to offset the inequities that would (and have) be amplified by disaster, and build our resilience as a community in the long term. To us, it seemed totally consistent with our mission, which is reinventing sustainability as an unprecedented phenomenon with equity at the center. What else would we engage with in this very real-time threat to humanity? And it’s also why, when Storm Uri happened, we used that same collaborative space to organize groups to share resources and avoid duplication of efforts as we addressed inequitable food and water distribution. 

 

Food access. Transportation access. Medical access. How are these not environmental issues? They are, obviously. So when our very important efforts to “save the X species” does not also intersect with the reality of inequitable vaccine distribution or police brutality, who do we think we really are, and what are we really about? 

 

I think many of us have experienced this great pause caused by the pandemic as an (perhaps sometimes unwelcome) opportunity to see some of this dysfunction and let ourselves experience the impact of all of it. Many of us have also realized that more is coming. In the coming decades, it’s not going to get easier.

 

Of course, we cannot then digest, embrace all the world’s problems at once. It wouldn’t be healthy. Honestly, if one could stare the totality of harm we have done over time – the collective trauma of lives taken and never brought justice, the thousands of demoralizing experiences of navigating brutally complex social service systems on people who have no alternative but to rely on them, the plastic found in fishes globally, the growing toxicity of our water systems, the rising sea levels and its disproportionate impact on marginalized communities, and the very long list of things that could follow… one staring at all of this would surely be overwhelmed with grief and anger. 

 

Many of us keep that kind of overwhelm at bay every day just to function. But what good has come from avoiding it? What good has come from working in our silos? 

 

Where does it all leave us?

 

It leaves us in need of healing. Racial healing. Environmental healing. Healing from the trauma of the history of exploitation and its impacts. I now see a therapist. And, among other things, we talk about this. I have been working on finding real hope in the face of what appears to be the futility of my own life’s work. And it’s working. I am, in fact, finding joy anyway. 

 

Joy. Maybe allowing oneself to experience joy in the face of reality is a revolutionary act. 

 

The leaves are still green. The water is still cold. The air (a little cleaner these days) still fills my lungs. And the face of my child (born on Earth Day) still looks at me with a hint of wonder in his eyes. And I have the very real privilege of working with some of the most incredible people in this town on some of the most important work I have ever done. Every day, they hold me to account for being true to who I say I am. 

 

I don’t take that joy lightly. There are many experiencing so much harm that joy is impossible. I carry my joy with a responsibility for my connection to them. And every day, when I wake up and shake off my cynicism long enough to drink a cup of hot water and make my lists, I ask myself, what can I do about it today?

 

Today the answer was to write this blog as a tribute to collective strength (as impossible as that sometimes seems) on this Earth Day, and also to extend an invitation to next year’s Earth Day ATX 2022. Trust that it will be a wholly reinvented experience. It can’t not.

The post Happy Earth Day in the Middle of the Great Pause appeared first on The Austin Common.

]]>
https://theaustincommon.com/happy-earth-day-in-the-middle-of-the-great-pause/feed/ 0