Monday, December 30, 2019

Instagram Posts from the Week of Dec. 15, 2019

Headlines and History - Dec. 15, 2019


***Trigger Warning***

In a CBS News report titled “Trump Administration Vows to Take Case to Bring Back Death Penalty to Supreme Court,” Caroline Cournoyer wrote, “At a time when several states, including some with Republican governors and legislatures, are moving away from the death penalty, the Trump administration wants to restart federal executions, which have been on hiatus for 16 years. A federal judge blocked its plan this week, but Attorney General William Barr said he would take the case to the Supreme Court if necessary.” 

On the Equal Justice Initiative website, there is more information about the death penalty. Innocence and error, inadequate counsel, racial bias, arbitrariness, and public safety are all addressed. Data from the site includes: “For every nine people executed, one person on death row has been exonerated”; “African Americans make up 42% of people on death row and 34% of those executed, but only 13% of the population is black”; “In 96% of states where researchers completed studies on race and the death penalty, they found discrimination based on the victim’s race, the defendant’s race, or both.”

In the Third Edition of the report Lynching in America: Confronting the Legacy of Racial Terror by the Equal Justice Initiative, researchers found that  “More than eight in ten American lynchings between 1889 and 1918 occurred in the South, and more than eight in ten of the nearly 1400 legal executions carried out in this country since 1976 have been in the South. Modern death sentences are disproportionately meted out to African Americans accused of crimes against white victims; efforts to combat racial bias and create federal protection against racial bias in the administration of the death penalty remain thwarted by familiar appeals to the rhetoric of states' rights; and regional data demonstrates that the modern death penalty in America mirrors racial violence of the past. As contemporary proponents of the American death penalty focus on form rather than substance by tinkering with the aesthetics of lethal punishment to improve procedures and methods, capital punishment remains rooted in racial terror - ‘a direct descendant of lynching’” (Equal Justice Initiative, 2017, p.64).


For more information on lynching, please listen to the 2 episodes of “The Jim Crow Series: Racial Terror, Violence, & Lynching” on the Sincerely, Lettie podcast. Our present is intertwined with and informed by our past. We must face the past so we can heal the future.

*Edited to add: On June 17, 2020, I came across The Redemption Project with Van Jones for CNN. I read the words, “Face the past. Heal the future.” I will no longer use this phrase for my Headlines and History posts beginning in June 2020.



#deathpenalty #lynching #abolishthedeathpenalty #equaljusticeinitiative #eji #bryanstevenson #lynchinginamerica #sincerelylettiepodcast #blacklivesmatter #endracism #endwhitesupremacy #dismantlewhitesupremacy #antiracist #antiracism #socialjustice #loveyourneighbor #seekjustice #lovemercy #walkhumbly #lament #repent #repair #facethepast #healthefuture #headlines #history #headlinesandhistory #historyandheadlines #challengethenarrative #broadeningthenarrative




Podcast Rec. - Dec. 17, 2019



"I feel more connected than I ever have in my life, in some ways, and even there being a kind of conversation there. In that way, I feel like I've never prayed more."

"Most of my prayer life historically was begging for forgiveness."

"I believe that prayer is a way of being in the world with God...That's part of what's so sad to me now is how much of my life that prayer just seemed like hard work, that prayer was something I dreaded, that it was something that I didn't enjoy, that there wasn't a sense of retreat, that prayer wasn't an escape. Because I think that's the idea now, prayer is an escape. It's breath. It's life. It's sustenance."

"For much of the first half of my life, I felt like I was so in my head, and I would so intellectualize everything, no wonder prayer felt impossible. Because since I was always intellectualizing my emotions, and everything's always words, words, words, that makes prayer nearly impossible. Whereas I feel like what prayer is often about is getting to a place that's deeper than words."

"When the faith is in a particular outcome, then when you don't get that outcome, then inevitably there's something wrong with you, there's something wrong with your faith, you didn't believe hard enough, you didn't wish hard enough, or there's something wrong with God, and neither one of those scenarios are good."


My experiences with prayer echoed Jonathan Martin’s as he spoke about prayer prior to deconstruction and on the other side of deconstruction. In recent months, when I tell people I will be praying for them, I don’t add what I’m thinking in my head, which is, “I’ll be awkwardly stumbling over my words as I attempt to pray for you.” I feel like I have such deep and constant communion with God as I communicate with God throughout my day about a passage or idea I’m now thinking about differently, but my prayer life has shifted, and I am still getting used to the changes. I really needed this podcast episode, and I hope it encourages you as much as it encouraged me. 


#jonathanmartin #thezeitcast #podcast #podcastrecommendation #podcastrec #prayerontheothersideofdeconstruction #prayer #deconstruction #reconstruction #faith #evolvingfaith #faithtransition #compassion #grace #mercy #empathy #listening #learning #love #pray #challengethenarrative #broadeningthenarrative



Account to Follow - Dec. 18, 2019


As you can see in Jemar Tisby’s IG profile, Jemar Tisby is President of The Witness (@thewitnessbcc), a co-host of the Pass the Mic podcast, a PhD candidate in history, and the author of the book The Color of Compromise: The Truth about the American Church’s Complicity in Racism.

I am grateful for Jemar Tisby’s voice through the articles he has written, the Pass the Mic podcast, and his book The Color of Compromise. Having the opportunity to learn from his wisdom and prophetic leadership is a gift to the Body of Christ.


Follow @jemartisby if you aren’t already, and support his work through The Witness, the Pass the Mic podcast, and by purchasing a copy of The Color of Compromise.


#jemartisby #accounttofollow #thewitness #thewitnessbcc #passthemicpodcast #passthemic #thecolorofcompromise #truth #church #complicityinracism #history #supportblackauthors #endwhitesupremacy #dismantlewhitesupremacy #endracism #endracismnow #antiracism #antiracist #love #empathy #equality #reflection #action #loveyourneighbor #seekjustice #restorativejustice #lovemercy #walkhumbly #challengethenarrative #broadeningthenarrative




Additional Rec. - Dec. 19, 2019


Additional Rec. - "What is White Supremacy?" by Elizabeth Martinez

“By not seeing that racism is systemic (part of a system), people often personalize or individualize racist acts. For example, they will reduce racist police behavior to ‘a few bad apples’ who need to be removed, rather than seeing it exists in police departments all over the country and is basic to the society. This mistake has real consequences: refusing to see police brutality as part of a system, and that the system needs to be changed, means that the brutality will continue.”

“The purpose of racism is much clearer when we call it ‘white supremacy.’ Some people think of racism as just a matter of prejudice. ‘Supremacy’ defines a power relationship.”

“Every nation has a creation myth, or origin myth, which is the story people are taught of how the nation came into being. Ours says the United States began with Columbus's so‐called ‘discovery’ of America, continued with settlement by brave Pilgrims, won its independence from England with the American Revolution, and then expanded westward until it became the enormous, rich country you see today. That is the origin myth. It omits three key facts about the birth and growth of the United States as a nation. Those facts demonstrate that White Supremacy is fundamental to the existence of this country.”

“In short, White Supremacy and economic power were born together. The United States is the first nation in the world to be born racist (South Africa came later) and also the first to be born capitalist. That is not a coincidence. In this country, as history shows, capitalism and racism go hand in hand.”

“Certain privileges were given to white indentured servants. They were allowed to join militias, carry guns, acquire land, and have other legal rights not allowed to slaves. With these privileges they were legally declared white on the basis of skin color and continental origin. That made  them ‘superior’ to Blacks (and Indians). Thus whiteness was born as a racist concept to prevent lower‐class whites from joining people of color, especially Blacks, against their class enemies. The concept of whiteness became a source of unity and strength for the vastly outnumbered Euroamericans ‐ as in South Africa, another settler nation. Today, unity across color lines remains the biggest threat in the eyes of a white ruling class.”

“The doctrine of Manifest Destiny facilitated the geographic extension and economic development of the United States while confirming racist policies and practices. It established White Supremacy more firmly than ever as central to the U.S. definition of itself. The arrogance of asserting that God gave white people (primarily men) the right to dominate everything around them still haunts our society and sustains its racist oppression.”


The “What is White Supremacy" document by Elizabeth Martinez has a copyright date of Feb. 1998. Almost 22 years later, there remains much work to be done to ensure that an accurate history is taught, rather than the origin myth rooted in the idea of white supremacy. Elizabeth Martinez unpacked a plethora of information in this 4 page document. As I read this, I thought of Rachel Held Evans saying, “If genocide in the Bible doesn’t bother you, genocide won’t bother you now.” If genocide, oppression, and white supremacy don’t bother us when we read about these things in the past in this country, they won’t bother us in the present. I see this document as an imperative to white people to wrestle with the uncomfortable and ugly aspects of this nation in order to actually address, repent of, and repair all the damage.




#additionalrecommendation #recommendation #whatiswhitesupremacy #elizabethmartinez #whitesupremacy #empathy #equality #reflection #action #loveyourneighbor #love #endracism #endracismnow #dismantlewhitesupremacy #endwhitesupremacy #humanity #history #originmyth #learning #socialjustice #seekjustice #restorativejustice #lovemercy #walkhumbly #lament #repent #repair #tellthetruth #challengethenarrative #broadeningthenarrative




Book Rec. - Dec. 21, 2019


Past Read- One Blood: Parting Words to the Church on Race by John M. Perkins with Karen Waddles

"Scripture was never intended to be used solely for individual application. It was meant for the community of believers. The psalms of lament were meant to be tools in the community worship experience to bring the worshipers into the presence of our God" (Perkins, 2018, p.66).

“Those who marched for equal rights in the 60s, both blacks and whites, were willing to risk their lives to end the scourge of segregation and Jim Crow in our country. They risked imprisonment, lynchings, beatings, and much more. May we have the same determination to risk life and limb for the worthy cause of bringing the kingdom of heaven to earth - that we might be one” (Perkins, 2018, p.91).

Using personal narrative, including chapters that focus on lament and confession, and highlighting 4 churches that are striving to live out God’s call to unity in multiethnic diversity, Mr. John Perkins, along with Karen Waddles as a contributor, wrote a compelling manifesto to the church regarding race and oneness. As I reflected on this book, I thought of the lines “Hey, you want unity? Then read a eulogy/Kill the power that exists up under you and over me” from the song “Facts” by Lecrae for what I must be doing in my personal life and working toward in the institutions in this country, including the Church, to dismantle systems of oppression in order to achieve the unity Mr. John Perkins wrote about in One Blood. I also thought of the lines “No one can win the war individually/It takes the wisdom of the elders and young people's energy,” from the song “Glory” by Common and John Legend.  Mr. John Perkins is a wealth of wisdom, and it is a gift to “sit at his feet” through reading his parting words to the Church on race.

Have you read this book? I would love to hear your thoughts.



#pastread #oneblood #partingwordstothechurchonrace #bookrecommendation #bookrec #johnperkins #civilrightsmovementpioneer #church #race #injustice #reading #learning #empathy #equality #reflection #action #seekjustice #socialjustice #racialjustice #restorativejustice #lovemercy #walkhumbly #lament #repent #repair #loveyourneighbor #tellthetruth #challengethenarrative #broadeningthenarrative

Instagram Posts from the Week of Dec. 8, 2019

Podcast Rec.- Dec. 10, 2019 

Past Listen - Uncivil podcast: “The Raid" (Released Oct. 4, 2017)

“We’re going to kick things off with a story that was written out of the official history just weeks after it happened. It’s about the most ambitious covert operation in the Civil War. And, it’s about black people who never thought they’d pick up a gun - but they did.” - Chenjerai Kumanyika

“Just to put that in context, if you look at Tubman’s work on the Underground Railroad, most conservative estimates say that she helped to free roughly 75 people, over the course of ten years - but in the Combahee Raid, more than 700 in a single trip.” - Jack Hitt

“The success of the Combahee Raid was front page news in 1863, North and South. Heading up a river? Daringly making a strike behind enemy lines? A month later, Robert E. Lee tried the exact same tactic at Gettysburg - a daring dash behind enemy lines. And we all know how that worked out. Major movies have been made about Lee’s greatest disaster.” Jack Hitt

“But there’s never been a movie about the success of the Combahee Raid. In fact, I only heard of it because it was the name of a feminist collective in the 1960s who took their name from Harriet Tubman’s leadership in the raid. It’s not in any standard history textbooks. The only official recognition is a tiny bridge, down where the highway crosses the Combahee. It’s named after Harriet Tubman. But it took two years of political wrangling to get a small sign placed at the river.” - Chenjerai Kumanyika


In this episode of Uncivil, Chenjerai Kumanyika and Jack Hitt spoke with descendants of Shedrick Manego, Harriet Tubman, and Colonel James Montgomery to discuss the Raid on Combahee Ferry. With Harriet Tubman as the spymaster, once enslaved black people who had escaped returned to Confederate territory to emancipate others who were still enslaved on eight plantations. I was 29 years old before I learned about this raid through the Uncivil podcast. These are the stories that need to fill our textbooks. Did you learn about the Raid on Combahee Ferry in school?


#ChenjeraiKumanyika #JackHitt #uncivil #podcast #podcastrecommendation #podcastrec #TheRaid #ShedrickManego #PaShed #HarrietTubman ColonelJamesMontgomery #FallonGreene #BrodyJamesMontgomery #KimberlyCornish #JadeLee #JeffGrigg #Beaufort #SouthCarolina #CombaheeRiver #TheRaidonCombaheeFerry #TheCombaheeFerryRaid #CombaheeRiverRaid #spy #spymaster #slavery #history #CivilWar #learning #challengethenarrative #broadeningthenarrative



Account to Follow - Dec. 11, 2019

As you can see in Kara Bohonowicz’s IG profile, Kara is a writer. Kara uses her IG to post about the worth of people. Also in her profile, she acknowledges that the church is often a place where women and those in the LGBTQ community are hurt.

I am encouraged by Kara’s posts, and I enjoy reading her writing. On November 9th, Kara posted “social media friends are real friends,” and it was such a sweet reminder of the sacred online community I have found here with kind people such as Kara.

Follow @kbohonowicz if you aren’t already, and support her as she inspires and uplifts others.


#kbohonowicz #accounttofollow #karabohonowicz #womansworth #supportwomen #worth #dignity #encouragement #love #empathy #equality #reflection #action #loveyourneighbor #seekjustice #restorativejustice #lovemercy #walkhumbly #challengethenarrative #broadeningthenarrative



Additional Rec. - Dec. 12, 2019


In this blog article, which is a part of The Equality Workbook: Freedom in Christ from the Oppression of Patriarchy, seven questions are asked to analyze various translations of the Bible regarding gender and women in specific passages.

“Questions considered:
-Does the version use gendered (male) language, when the oldest available manuscripts do not? (Genesis 1:27, and 2:7)
-Does the version suggest that male authority is a divine mandate, or that women will ‘desire to control’ men? (Genesis 3:16)
-Does the version portray the leadership of women as inherently misleading? (Isaiah 3:12)
-Does the version introduce negative accusations against a female character in the Bible that are not found in the oldest available manuscript evidence? (Judges 19:2)
-Is the version inconsistent when describing ministry roles for men and women? (Romans 16:1-2)
-Does the version change the name of a female apostle to a man’s name, or does it call into question her apostolic ministry? (Romans 16:7)
-Does the version appear to presume that authority in the church or in the home must be ‘male’? (1 Timothy 2:12)”

“Translations with a check mark appear free of androcentric, patriarchal and sexist language in those specific passages. They also appear to have a higher degree of accuracy when compared with the oldest available Hebrew, Greek and Aramaic manuscripts.”

“The least gender-accurate translation of both Old and New Testaments, scoring 0 for each category, is the English Standard Version (ESV).”


I am not trying to shame anyone who uses the ESV Bible translation. Though I no longer read the ESV, I did for many years. I wish I had known the information contained in this blog article, though I’m not sure it would have made a difference back then. I had internalized sexism and a host of other issues, so I doubt I would have cared if someone had sent this to me. I highly recommend exploring The Equality Workbook website and available resources there.



#additionalrecommendation #recommendation #AnEgalitarianReviewOfBibleTranslations #TheEqualityWorkbook #FreedomInChristFromTheOppressionOfPatriarchy #BobandHelgaEdwards #antisexist #antisexism #feminism #feminist #jesusfeminist #whitefeminismisnotfeminism #empathy #equality #reflection #action #loveyourneighbor #love #learning #justice #seekjustice #restorativejustice #lovemercy #walkhumbly #lament #repent #repair #tellthetruth #challengethenarrative #broadeningthenarrative



Book Rec. - Dec. 14, 2019

Current Read - Becoming by Michelle Obama

“I imagine that the administrators at Princeton didn't love the fact that students of color largely stuck together. The hope was that all of us would mingle in heterogeneous harmony, deepening the quality of student life across the board. It's a worthy goal. I understand that when it comes to campus diversity, the ideal would be to achieve something resembling what's often shown on college brochures-smiling students working and socializing in neat, ethnically blended groups. But even today, with white students continuing to outnumber students of color on college campuses, the burden of assimilation is put largely on the shoulders of minority students. In my experience, it's a lot to ask. At Princeton, I needed my black friends. We provided one another relief and support...Your world shifts, but you're asked to adjust and overcome, to play your music the same as everyone else. This is doable, of course - minority and underprivileged students rise to the challenge all the time - but it takes energy. It takes energy to be the only black person in a lecture hall or one of a few nonwhite people trying out for a play or joining an intramural team. It requires effort, an extra level of confidence, to speak in those settings and own your presence in the room. Which is why when my friends and I found one another at dinner each night, it was with some degree of relief. It's why we stayed a long time and laughed as much as we could” (Obama, 2018, pp.74-75).

“I'd never been one who'd choose to spend a Saturday at a political rally. The appeal of standing in an open gym or high school auditorium to hear lofty promises and platitudes never made much sense to me. Why I wondered, were all these people here? Why would they layer on extra socks and stand for hours in the cold? I could imagine people bundling up and waiting to hear a band whose every lyric they could sing or enduring a snowy Super Bowl for a team they'd followed since childhood. But politics? This was unlike anything I'd experienced before. It began dawning on me that we were the band. We were the team about to take the field. What I felt more than anything was a sudden sense of responsibility. We owed something to each one of these people. We were asking for an investment of their faith, and now we had to deliver on what they'd brought us, carrying that enthusiasm through twenty months and fifty states and right into the White House. I hadn't believed it was possible, but maybe now I did. This was the call-and-response of democracy, I realized, a contract forged person by person. You show up for us, and we'll show up for you. I had fifteen thousand more reasons to want Barack to win” (Obama, 2018, p.232).

“In general, I felt as if I couldn't win, that no amount of faith or hard work would push me past my detractors and their attempts to invalidate me. I was female, black, and strong, which to certain people, maintaining a certain mindset, translate only to ‘angry.’ It was another damaging cliché, one that's been forever used to sweep minority women to the perimeter of every room, an unconscious signal not to listen to what we've got to say” (Obama, 2018, p.265).

“You had only to look around at the faces in the room to know that despite their strengths these girls would need to work hard to be seen. There were girls in hijab, girls for whom English was a second language, girls whose skin made up every shade of brown. I knew they'd have to push back against the stereotypes that would get put on them, all the was they'd be defined before they'd had a chance to define themselves. They'd need to fight the invisibility that comes with being poor, female, and of color. They'd have to work to find their voices and not be diminished, to keep themselves from getting beaten down. They would have to work just to learn. But their faces were hopeful, and now so was I. For me it was a strange, quiet revelation: They were me, as I’d once been. And I was them, as they could be. The energy I felt thrumming in that school had nothing to do with obstacles. It was the power of nine hundred girls striving” (Obama, 2018, p.319).


In Michelle Obama’s memoir Becoming, the book is arranged into three parts: “Becoming Me,” “Becoming Us”, “Becoming More.” I loved learning more about Michelle Obama’s childhood, relationship with Barack Obama, life as the First Lady of the United States, and her recent work. Michelle Obama’s beauty, grace, kindness, authenticity, and perseverance shone through the pages so clearly. Have you read this book?


#currentread #becoming #bookrecommendation #bookrec #michelleobama #memoir #becomingthebook #reading #beauty #grace #kindness #authenticity #perseverance #becomingme #becomingus #becomingmore #learning #antiracism #antiracist #endracism #endracismnow #feminism #feminist #whitefeminismisnotfeminism #womenarepeopletoo #endsexism #endmisogyny #endmisogynoir #enddiscrimination #broadeningthenarrative 

Saturday, December 28, 2019

Book Rec. - Dec. 28, 2019

Current Read - The Making of Asian America: A History by Erika Lee

“Asian Americans have differed not only in their country of origin, but also in their immigration and generational status, class position, religion, and gender. These differences have resulted in distinct experiences and histories. It is fair to ask whether there is even one 'Asian America,' or one 'Asian American history.' Asian Americans with long roots in this country may wonder what they have in common with today's recent arrivals. Similarly, new Asian immigrants and their descendants may not think that the histories of early Asian Americans are relevant to their own experiences. But they should. There is great diversity within Asian America and across Asian American history, but there are also significant similarities and connections. The experiences of previous generations shaped the world that Asian Americans live in today. Likewise, new immigration has helped us see the past in fresh ways” (Lee, 2015, p.3).

“Even as discriminatory laws were struck down and as social attitudes have mellowed, Asian Americans have still not achieved equality in American life. In contemporary America, Asian Americans occupy unique and constantly shifting positions between black and white, foreign and American, privilege and poverty. Depending on what is happening inside and outside the United States, certain Asian American groups have been labeled as 'good Asians' ('model minorities,' 'honorary whites,' cultural brokers, and loyal citizens), while others have been labeled as 'bad Asians' (perpetual foreigners, religious others, unassimilated refugees, spies, terrorists, and the enemy within)” (Lee, 2015, p.8).

This is another book I wish had been part of my history curriculum in high school. Erika Lee was thorough in writing about the history of Asian Americans. She connected the history to present day experiences while including information on the numerous policies that shaped those experiences, past and present, in the Americas. Language applied to immigrants today is recycled language from decades ago that is still just as damaging in reinforcing stereotypes and dehumanizing people. The Making of Asian America: A History confronts white-washed history, challenging and broadening the narratives that perpetuate the idea of white supremacy.

Have you read this book?


#currentread #themakingofasianamerica #bookrecommendation #bookrec #erikalee #reading #asianamericanexperiences #learning #history #endracism #endracismnow #endstereotypes #dismantlewhitesupremacy #empathy #equality #reflection #action #lament #repent #repair #seekjustice #socialjustice #restorativejustice #lovemercy #walkhumbly #challengethenarrative #broadeningthenarrative 


Monday, December 16, 2019

Instagram Posts from the Week of Dec. 1, 2019

Podcast Rec. - Dec. 3, 2019



“They asked the same question [who would you not like to see your child marry] in 2014 or 2013, whenever they compiled the research, and the top answer was not religion, not race, it was, ‘I would not want my child to marry someone of a different political party.’” - Michael Wear

“I think the important thing is to not go to politics looking for your inner needs to be met.” - Michael Wear

“You need to have a firmer ground to stand upon when you’re engaging in politics than politics itself.” - Michael Wear

“We, especially those of us who are a part of this conversation, those of you listening in who are sensitive to these kinds of things, need to think about the spiritual harm that a politics of pure power does to people and the language of power and who has it and who does not.” - Michael Wear

Suzanne Stabile and Ian Cron interviewed Michael Wear in the episode of The Road Back to You podcast. Michael Wear directed faith outreach for President Obama’s 2012 re-election campaign. The conversation was fascinating as Michael shared about politics and faith through the lens of an Enneagram 4. 


#suzannestabile #iancron #michaelwear #theroadbacktoyou #podcast #podcastrecommendation #podcastrec #politicsandpersonality #enneagram #enneagram4 #faith #evolvingfaith #faithtransition #deconstruction #politics #newpolitics #compassion #grace #mercy #empathy #equality #listening #learning #love #loveyourneighbor #challengethenarrative #broadeningthenarrative



Account to Follow - Dec. 4, 2019


As you can see in the IG profile, Bible Belt Queers is a book, “a new anthology made by Bible Belt queers.” I first heard about this account through Kyle Medlin’s profile (@itskmeds). 

The summary of Bible Belt Queers from the Etsy listing states, “Bible Belt Queers was created to empower LGBTQIA folx from the South to share their experiences surrounding growing up queer in the Bible Belt.” Bible Belt Queers was compiled and edited by Darci McFarland. On the Bible Belt Queers page, I’ve learned more about the contributors to the Bible Belt Queers book. I love reading pieces of the stories of the beautiful people who shared their hearts in this collection.

Follow @biblebeltqueers if you aren’t already, and support the work of those who contributed to the Bible Belt Queers book by purchasing a copy.

#biblebeltqueers #accounttofollow #supportLGBTQIA #poetry #essays #visualart #anthology #compilation #biblebelt #enddiscrimination #endALLdiscrimination #love #empathy #equality #reflection #action #loveyourneighbor #seekjustice #restorativejustice #lovemercy #walkhumbly #challengethenarrative #broadeningthenarrative




Additional Rec. - Dec. 5, 2019



In this article, Johnny Silvercloud explicated six freedoms black people do not have.


“Here, after all of my studies and observations, I realize that there are Six freedoms - essential human rights - black people do not have:
- Freedom of Emotion
- Freedom of Space (Appearance)
- Freedom of Memory
- Freedom of Healing (Recovery)
- Freedom of Self-Defense
- The Freedom to Protect the Other Five”

“When black people don’t have Freedom of Emotion, we don’t have the freedom to express our pain. We don’t have freedom to express our most-justified anger.”

“This white entitlement to Black Space is evident in regards to how many black women (and black men!) speak on their experiences when it comes to white people reaching to touch their hair. Once again, this comes from a sense of sociological ownership; when Slavery ended white people never got detoxed from it.”

“Freedom of Space also affects Freedom of Appearance. Black people are simply not free to express themselves through clothing, hairstyles, or any form of physical decorations without harassment. All our lives we are told to not sag our pants for example, but infinitely wearing belts properly doesn’t ever save Black lives. Not having gold grills in our mouths, does not net us any respect to the point where white folks recognize our humanity (on equal terms).”

“Black people do not have Freedom of Memory. Ever noticed that, as a black person, you can never mention or reference oddly specific parts of American history without accusations of being 'stuck' in the past? Ever noticed that anyone else, especially white people, can mention or reference any part of American history without ever being accused of the same? Weird, right? The accusations of being 'stuck' in the past when mentioning or referencing Slavery, Jim Crow or any form of historical white supremacy is a form of memory policing.”

“This is what a lack of Freedom of Recovery looks like; one cannot make mistakes and change their lives around. Any mistake in life becomes permanent stains. And white people are not treated like this.”

“It has to be understood that in order to heal, the trauma inflicted has to be properly identified. One cannot expect healing of a wound when one pretends the wound doesn’t exist. Black people are charged with the task to pretend Slavery, Jim Crow, police crime immunity, the prison-industrial complex, and other institutional racist systems doesn’t exist, all while being affected by them. This ignorance exists to make white people comfortable.”

“This problem of never considering a Black person’s fear of being automatically murdered by police forces and other white supremacy-enabled miscreants is a great pathology within white America. This lack of consideration towards a Black person’s rational fear of being lynched is directly tied to a culturally sanctioned restriction of a Black person’s right to self-defense.”

"Looking at the first five Freedoms, we as Black People don’t have the freedom to protect, or fight for, any of the freedoms listed here. This is the Freedom to protect the other Five. This is overall freedom of protest. Freedom to fight. It’s another thing we aren’t allowed to do.”


Please read the full article hyperlinked above. To my black brothers and sisters, I am sorry for not doing enough to dismantle the lie of white supremacy in myself individually or in institutions. I trust you to tell me the truth about your life and existence and to hold me accountable. If you are white and are feeling guilty or defensive after reading this, let’s talk about it through DM or face-to-face, not in the comment section here. White people, let us lament, repent, and repair the damage around us to ensure all people experience freedom and flourishing. And as we dismantle this system of oppression, let us do so under the leadership of black women, for they have always fought for everyone else. Believe black women and fight for and with them as hard as they fight for others, because a better world for black women will mean a better world for all people.



#additionalrecommendation #recommendation #sixfreedomsblackpeopledonothave #freedom #freedoms #johnnysilvercloud #empathy #equality #reflection #action #believeblackwomen #loveyourneighbor #love #learning #justice #socialjustice #seekjustice #restorativejustice #lovemercy #walkhumbly #lament #repent #repair #tellthetruth #dismantlewhitesupremacy #endracism #antiracism #challengethenarrative #broadeningthenarrative



Book Rec. - Dec. 7, 2019



"Somewhere in the midst of the notepads was a typed list of questions supplied by the WPA. Questions often reveal the desired answer. By the 1930s, most white Americans had been demanding for decades that they hear only a sanitized version of the past into which Lorenzo Ivy had been born. This might seem strange. In the middle of the nineteenth century, white Americans had gone to war with each other over the future of slavery in their country, and slavery had lost. Indeed, for a few years after 1865, many white northerners celebrated emancipation as one of their collective triumphs. Yet whites’ belief in the emancipation made permanent by the Thirteenth Amendment, much less in the race-neutral citizenship that the Fourteenth and Fifteenth Amendments had written into the Constitution, was never that deep" (Baptist, 2014, p.xvii).

"Here is something that is no accident: the most popular and creative genres of music in the history of the modern world emerged from the corners of the United States where enslavers’ power battered enslaved African Americans over and over again. In the place Reuben was being dragged to, and in all the places where forced migration’s effects were most dramatic and persistent, music could not prevent a whipping or feed a single hungry mouth. But it did serve the enslaved as another tongue, one that spoke what the first one often could not” (Baptist, 2014, p.160).

This book, which reads like a high school history textbook that all high school students should be required to read, is a disruption of the “sanitized version of the past” most people are taught in the United States. Using the heart, feet, heads, right hand, left hand, tongues, breath, seed, blood, backs, arms, and the corpse as chapter titles, Baptist wrote a gut-wrenching account of the truth of American slavery and the making of American capitalism as a result. On page 160, Baptist wrote about music, which made me think of Michelle Higgins of Truth’s Table referring to music as resistance to oppression, historically and currently, for black people. Join or continue in the fight under the leadership of black people to work toward the day when resisting oppression is not a reason that black people have to sing.

Have you read this book? I would love to hear your thoughts.



#pastread #thehalfhasneverbeentold #bookrecommendation #bookrec #edwardbaptist #slavery #capitalism #history #blackhistory #americanhistory #injustice #reading #learning #empathy #equality #reflection #action #seekjustice #socialjustice #racialjustice #restorativejustice #lovemercy #walkhumbly #lament #repent #repair #loveyourneighbor #tellthetruth #challengethenarrative #broadeningthenarrative

"Self-Publishing Tips with Nicki Pappas" Episode of BtN

A *bonus episode* of the Broadening the Narrative podcast is out now. You can listen to the episode "Self-Publishing Tips with Nicki Pa...