Racial Justice: How Can I Help? 

Our Meeting encourages ALL in our community to become active! The following are some resources that might help you take action:

  • Check out the new exhibit entitled “Pool: A Social History of Segregation” at the Fairmount Water Works to explore the connection between water, social justice and public health: www.poolphl.com.
     
  • For a basic understanding of Critical Race Theory, a hot topic right now, check out the following article: Click Here
  • Measure your behavior to see where you are in your goal to being an ally using this checklist created by Dr. John Raible “out of the need to articulate specific behaviors that led me to view certain individuals as “allies” in the struggle against racism…after thinking about what behaviors allowed me to develop a degree of trust with certain individuals, whether they identified as white people or as people of color.” Click Here
  • Watch a 20-minute film from The Marshall Project and Frontline on an undocumented family dealing with detention, homelessness, and Covid-19. Warning: I needed tissues. Click Here
     
  • Play the Race Game Thandeka, an African American Unitarian Universalist minister invented the Race Game, described in her 1999 book Learning to Be White: Money, Race and God in America. It was homework given when taking a course from CSWAC (Center for the Study of White American Culture).  The Race Game is based on just one rule. For the coming week you must use a racial/ethnic descriptor whenever you mention someone. For instance, “my Latinx boss,” “my white husband,” “my Black son-in-law,” “my Arab neighbor.”  Observe any feelings that come up as you step outside of the norms for describing people and then talk to someone about your experience.
     
  • Click Here to view a powerful Photo Essay entitled Stranger Fruit, which puts visual images to the fear of loss and trauma that is constant for America’s Black mothers.“5 Tips for being an Ally”
  • Click Here for 5 ways to Act as an Ally. From 2014, but still relevant today.
     
  • “Why I’m No Longer Talking to White People About Race” Reni Eddo-Lodge Click Here From Britain, this is a quick discussion of her book by the same name, originally started with a post to her blog.
     
  • “9 Phrases Allies Can Say When Called Out Instead of Getting Defensive” by Sam Dylan Smith Click Here Originally written for LGBTQIA, this applies to race as well and is a good way to fight against white fragility on a person-to-person basis.

Resources on Indigenous Peoples: