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the sun is on my side

21 y/o nursing student all about quietly analyzing and deconstructing white supremacist capitalist patriarchy....I luv cats, food, fashion, afros, frilly pretty things, I post rambles/whines/thoughts a lot, and anything else I find interesting/inspiring/whatever

Posts tagged community

Oct 9 '11
kemetically-ankhtified:

PEOPLE OF COLOR WORKING GROUP @ OCCUPYWALLSTREET
Today’s meeting gave me new hope for people of color. It showed me that we never give up. That we fight for our people when the time calls for it. That we can come together and unify in the midst of all this oppression, when the cards are stacked most against us.
One guy argued that we should take this opportunity to educate our communities, and bring this energy and organization to the hood, where the oppression is most evident. the dude read my mind.
There were sub-committees for concerns such as students, arts and culture, press, social media, education, research, etc etc. I (kind of) joined the education committee where they’re proposing to train people on different facets of oppression, such as racism, patriarchy, environmental racism, gentrification, among others.
Then to finish it off there was a bombazo, which is when drummers circle around and play while someone in the middle dances to the beat. i was hype! there were ppl clapping, shaking maracas, singing along: TUMBA LA PARED! (BREAK DOWN THE WALL!) This musical/cultural outlet is EXACTLY what keeps social movements alive. you cannot have a social movement strictly be about politics. You need culture. You need to identify with your roots. People of color are rich in ancestral tradition and veneration.
This kind of energy makes me wanna come back down to the city for good and join my people in solidarity as the times demand it.

kemetically-ankhtified:

PEOPLE OF COLOR WORKING GROUP @ OCCUPYWALLSTREET

Today’s meeting gave me new hope for people of color. It showed me that we never give up. That we fight for our people when the time calls for it. That we can come together and unify in the midst of all this oppression, when the cards are stacked most against us.

One guy argued that we should take this opportunity to educate our communities, and bring this energy and organization to the hood, where the oppression is most evident. the dude read my mind.

There were sub-committees for concerns such as students, arts and culture, press, social media, education, research, etc etc. I (kind of) joined the education committee where they’re proposing to train people on different facets of oppression, such as racism, patriarchy, environmental racism, gentrification, among others.

Then to finish it off there was a bombazo, which is when drummers circle around and play while someone in the middle dances to the beat. i was hype! there were ppl clapping, shaking maracas, singing along: TUMBA LA PARED! (BREAK DOWN THE WALL!) This musical/cultural outlet is EXACTLY what keeps social movements alive. you cannot have a social movement strictly be about politics. You need culture. You need to identify with your roots. People of color are rich in ancestral tradition and veneration.

This kind of energy makes me wanna come back down to the city for good and join my people in solidarity as the times demand it.

(Source: kemetically-afrolatino)

283 notes (via bad-dominicana & kemetically-afrolatino)Tags: people of color occupywallstreet community culture

Sep 6 '11
When we heal the woundedness inside us, when we attend to the inner love-seeking, love-starved child, we make ourselves ready to enter more fully into community. We can experience the totality of life because we have become fully life-affirming. Like our ancestors using our powers to the fullest, we share the secrets of healing and come to know sustained joy.
— bell hooks (via restoried)

78 notes (via bad-dominicana & restoried-deactivated20120304)Tags: bell hooks healing compassion love forgiveness whole liberation joy community sisters of the yam

Aug 21 '11
freetheseed:

Audre Lord - Indigenous and Cultural Rights Activist and Author

freetheseed:

Audre Lord - Indigenous and Cultural Rights Activist and Author

1,663 notes (via ribcagerebel & lsbhadlfjbnaslurgwiqebhasd-deac)Tags: community feminism