5th Round of the Anne Braden Program Complete

For the past seven months, I have had the immense privilege of living again on Ohlone territories, in Oakland, California, to take part in the Anne Braden Program once again, but this time as a Braden Leadership Team member.

More about the program here: http://collectiveliberation.org/our-work-2/the-anne-braden-anti-racist-organizing-training-program/

The entire, invaluable 2015 reader here: http://collectiveliberation.org/our-work-2/the-anne-braden-anti-racist-organizing-training-program/2015-abp/

And once again, it has been completely transformative for me. I have learned immense and incredibly important lessons – and the timing couldn’t be more important, as both the incredible and beautiful resistance and resurgence of opposition to white supremacy abounds, and the horrific reality of racist violence continues.

For now, I want to share the beautiful panels that the Catalyst Project has organized during the Anne Braden Program this year. Each one is so full of incredible insights and amazing speakers – please take the time to watch and if you can, share with people you know – a dear comrade of mine has even been organizing community screenings.

Videos and transcripts of Catalyst Project’s panels: http://collectiveliberation.org/annebradenprogramcompleted/

Panels:

Anti-Racist Organizing Strategies Panel

Another World is Possible: Visionary Politics Panel

and Photos from Indigenous Resilience and Resistance to Colonization Panel

As you can see, this organization is doing a huge amount of work to support anti-racist organizing. Please consider making a donation in support of this work. You can donate online here: https://donatenow.networkforgood.org/1391439

 

5th Round of the Anne Braden Program Complete

New video from Unist’ot’en Camp: Please share!

Please see the latest video from Unist’ot’en Camp here

Freda

From their Facebook page:

Despite numerous correspondences of “No to all pipelines” on Unist’ot’en en territories – TransCanada Coastal GasLink has been ignoring our hereditary governance system and infringing on Unist’ot’en Territory through Canadian Helicopters, Getumdone Contracting, and McElaney Survey crews. See the disrespect of this greedy industry in action.

SHARE FAR AND WIDE.

More updates on http://unistotencamp.com/

Also, Unist’ot’en Camp’s 6th annual summer action camp is coming up July 8-12 and you can sign up here.

6th Annual camp

And there are many ways to support the camp, please see the following info!

General donations: Checks can be sent to: Tse Wedi Eltlh at 620 CN Station Road, Smithers BC, V0J-2N1 or send an e-transfer to fhuson (at) gmail.com (be sure to send the e-transfer password in a separate email to the same email address)

Unistoten Camp’s website: http://unistotencamp.com/?p=935

Fundraiser for most recent project, the Healing Center, currently being built at the camp: https://fundrazr.com/campaigns/axsMd/ab/24dGu0

More suggestions on how to support here: http://unistotencamp.com/?page_id=24

And they have an updated list of wanted items and supplies here (from: https://unistotencampsignup.wordpress.com/):

Camp List of Needs: Food Items: Potatoes, carrots, beets, onions, squash, cabbage, rutabaga, apples, oranges, limes, lemons, avocado, cucumber, peppers, kale, spinach, lettuce, flour, oats, canola oil, rice, quinoa, cornstarch, dried chickpeas, peanut butter, nuts (cashews, almonds, macadamia, other), raisins (sulphite free), butter

Note: most food items are needed in LARGE quantities! If you can try, try to connect with a supplier or grocery store that might be willing to donate!

Non-Food Items: large coolers, work gloves, food-grade buckets with lids, clipboards, markers (permanent/dry erase), cloth tape, precision torque bits, waterproof dry bags, quality baking pans…. and of course, cash!

New video from Unist’ot’en Camp: Please share!

~ “End Police Brutality” poster for sale as fundraiser ~

This poster, “End Police Brutality” is the result of a collaboration between David James Hudson, Molly Jane and myself in 2013, based around elements of David’s spoken word piece, “Another Unoriginal Poem about Police Brutality” (http://is.gd/aupapb).

end_police_brutality_FINAL

Copies of the poster are for sale by donation as a fundraiser for Yuvette Henderson’s family and the Ferguson Rapid Response Leadership Fund/Racial Justice Rapid Response Fund. Would you or someone you know like a copy of this? Please share and get in touch if you would like to order posters & please see below for more information.
I will mail or bring you a color, 11 X 17 print of this poster. We are asking for sliding scale $10 – 50 for a poster, pay what you can, with all of the proceeds going to be split between:
Support for Yuvette Henderson’s Family
On Tuesday, February 3rd, 2015 Oakland Resident and mother of two, Yuvette Henderson was killed by Emeryville Police Department in West Oakland. She was 38 years old when her life was stolen. Yuvette leaves behind a 15 year old son and an 11 year old daughter and her family is in need of support.  Please make a donation to hold up Yuvette Henderson’s family in this time of tragedy.  All funds collected will go towards funeral expenses and the needs of Yuvette’s 2 teenage children. (From: http://www.youcaring.com/memorial-fundraiser/support-yuvette-henderson-s-family/306346)*
*While this online fundraiser has ended, Yuvette’s family is still accepting support and so half of all funds raised will be given to her family.
and

The Ferguson Rapid Response Leadership Fund/Racial Justice Rapid Response Fund (https://donatenow.networkforgood.org/1438459)*
Organizers in Ferguson have set up two funds through the Movement Strategy Center that can be selected from the drop down menu at this link. “Ferguson Leadership Rapid Response Fund” will support young leaders that have lost jobs and housing in order to organize full-force in this moment. “Racial Justice Rapid Response Fund” supports organizers who are working on the ground in Ferguson and nationally to keep the focus on police violence in black communities. (From: http://collectiveliberation.org/in-the-time-of-ferguson/)

*You can either donate directly or I can forward on what you donate for the poster to this fund.
To buy a poster or if you have any questions, please contact me (Annie) at anniembanks at gmail.com. Thank you for reading!
~ “End Police Brutality” poster for sale as fundraiser ~

“It felt like there was no end to the screaming sadness: one sister’s take on #mmiw” by Melina Laboucan-Massimo

Dear readers, please read this powerful piece, “It felt like there was no end to the screaming sadness: one sister’s take on #mmiw”, by Melina Laboucan-Massimo, sister of Bella Laboucan-McLean. Bella was murdered tragically in 2013 and in this article, Melina addresses the ongoing colonial violence that has so deeply impacted her life and the lives of all the family members of missing and murdered Indigenous women #MMIW:

http://aptn.ca/news/2014/09/25/felt-like-end-screaming-sadness-one-sisters-take-mmiw/

Bella Laboucan-McLean.

~ With love to the family and the memory of Bella Laboucan-McLean ~

“It felt like there was no end to the screaming sadness: one sister’s take on #mmiw” by Melina Laboucan-Massimo

Original Artwork in Support of the Ancestral Pride Chainsaw Fund! Support the Sovereign Housing Project and Get Art!

Original Artwork in Support of the Ancestral Pride Chainsaw Fund! Support the Sovereign Housing Project and Get Art!

Ancestral Pride (http://ancestralpride.ca/), “Gwaiina and Xhopakelxhit sovereign Ahoushat / Snuneymuxw. NYM og’s, West Coast warriors seeking to create a culture of resistance by: asserting the jurisdiction and authority we have over our lives and lands. We are in resistance to colonization, industrial land death, mining, logging, pipelines and the illegally occupying military force of so called canada. We also are part of a larger network of decolonizing sovereign nations. Husband and wife, mother and father, grandfather and grandmother, allies in solidarity with those are fighting for our rights to a future for our great great great grandchildren. Nothing more, nothing less, dedicated to our way of life, and to upholding the ways of our ancestors” whose aim is to “ensure the continuity of the land, by educating ourselves, and others as much as we can about the need to connect with our home lands”, is fundraising for a chainsaw! This will support the work Ancestral Pride does in the Sovereign Housing Project:

The project will address our three biggest concerns, protecting the land, housing, and feeding ourselves adequately and well. We are seeking those who are willing to help us build and grow as a village because this kind of movement is the wave of the future, we are in a unique position in that we occupy an island that is not adjacent to any other towns or cities we can do this with little to no impunity.

Ahousaht First Nation is comprised of 1600 band members 900 of whom live on reserve, it is part of the 14 Nuu Chah Nulth tribes and also the largest. Located on Flores Island 45 minutes by boat north west of Tofino British Columbia it is one of the last vast (semi)untouched tracts of rainforest left in B.C. Ahousaht has the privilege and the distinction of being able to remain on their original village site despite colonization and disenfranchisement of the Nuu Chah Nulth as a whole.

Since the time of contact, they have been forced to send away their children to residential schools, endured the 60′s and 70′s scoop of children by foster care, had their spiritual and traditional ways stripped from them by the Potlatch ban, and forced to adopt a foreign and unpalatable way of life in order to endure til this day. Indigenous knowledge and spirituality have been hidden and lost to them and their children resulting in a reserve that has a high rate of alcohol and drug abuse, child apprehension, poverty, and 3rd world living conditions. Romanced by promises of riches from corporate industry with little to no monetary return to date it is time for Ahousaht to reclaim Indigenous Sovereignty in a healthy and economically viable manner.

Indigenous pathways will be used to implement cultural pride, recover knowledge that has been lost, create a new way for the future. From: http://ancestralpride.ca/?page_id=7

These original lino-cut prints are available for $50 – $150 (or more!), with all the proceeds going to the Sovereign Housing Project. If you would like a print shipped to you, it is $10 for shipping in addition to your kind donation. Please send all donations to mamazonscreations@gmail.com.

Support land defenders and get original artwork today!

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Final day to contribute to the Fundrazr “Build the Warrior-Up Bunkhouse” at Unist’ot’en Camp – donate and get art!

“If our people make decisions with our unborn populations in mind, the manipulative tactics by industry and goverment, which are meant to divide our people will not work. We will prevail as sovereign people on our unceded and protected lands.” – Freda Huson, spokesperson for the Unist’ot’en.

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“Building Resistance, Defending the Land, No Pipelines”

The Unist’ot’en Action Camp is “a resistance community whose purpose is to protect sovereign Wet’suwet’en territory from several proposed pipelines from the Tar Sands Gigaproject and shale gas from Hydraulic Fracturing Projects in the Peace River Region.” (from http://unistotencamp.com/).

These original artworks are 8″ by 9″ and 12″ by 10″ and can be shipped anywhere. They are linocuts (carved linoleum which has been inked and printed on watercolor paper). If you have a background color that you would like, please request it from me in your order. All of the proceeds from this artwork will go directly to the Unist’ot’en Action Camp. Please email me at anniebee at riseup dot net, if you would like a copy of one or both of these linocuts in exchange for a donation to the Unist’ot’en Action Camp (no amount is too small but a recommended donation for these prints is $25-$100), plus shipping costs.

To donate to the camp, you can first donate here, to the Fundrazr site: https://fundrazr.com/campaigns/fhoO8?fb_action_ids=10202775830052795&fb_action_types=fundrazr%253Adonate&fb_source=other_multiline&action_object_map=%257B%252210202775830052795%2522%253A281379658686878%257D&action_type_map=%257B%252210202775830052795%2522%253A%2522fundrazr%253Adonate%2522%257D&action_ref_map=%255B%255D, until the end of today, May 1. After that, “If you would like to donate directly to our camp please feel free to send your email donations to fhuson@gmail.com. Otherwise, you can send a cheque to the camp, Tse Wedi Elth (Rocks Flowing), 620 CN Station Rd, Smithers, BC, V0J 2N1.”

Support is needed for this incredible resistance community, to ensure that operations run smoothly over the spring and for the upcoming Spring Bunkhouse Build. Please see the Unist’ot’en Action Camp’s website here for more information on how you can support the camp.

With love and resistance!

Final day to contribute to the Fundrazr “Build the Warrior-Up Bunkhouse” at Unist’ot’en Camp – donate and get art!

“End Police Brutality”

end_police_brutality_FINAL_spellingfixed_SMALL_lowerres-2 (2)

Today, March 15, is the International Day Against Police Brutality. This poster, “End Police Brutality” is the result of a collaboration between David James Hudson, Molly Jane and myself, based around elements of David’s spoken word piece, “Another Unoriginal Poem about Police Brutality” (http://is.gd/aupapb).

If you’d like a copy, 11 x 17 prints are available for $10 (+ shipping if you’re far away), so if you’d like one, please message me at anniebee at riseup dot net. And please share this post. Also, look for events happening in your community today to mark the International Day Against Police Brutality, which is every March 15.

Artists’ update: Please see this updated version of “End Police Brutality” with changes made to address errors in the original print. Printed posters will reflect this second amended version. If sharing, please share this version. Thank you!

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Zine: Reflections on my time as a participant in the Anne Braden Anti-Racist Training for White Social Justice Activists 2013 by annie banks

After completing the Anne Braden Program* last year, in 2013, I was thinking a lot about how I could share back what I learned with people in the community that I had previously been living in, on Lekwungen, Esquimalt and WSANEC territories. I had been sharing readings weekly as well as reflections on my blog but I realize that not everyone has access to the internet or time to read someone’s blog. Zines are something that I was introduced to as a teenager and then went on to make some myself and I was inspired by all the rad zines that I have read over the years, especially the amazing zines written by people of color and Indigenous folks talking about anti-oppression, anti-racism and anti-colonialism. The most recent zine that I have been learning a ton from is “Everyone wants to be an ally until it’s time to do some ally shit” by Ancestral Pride – you should order one and download it at http://ancestralpride.ca/ or https://www.facebook.com/IndigenousReoccupationOfAncestralLands!

*What is the Anne Braden Program?
Catalyst Project launched the Anne Braden Program in 2008 and since that time they have offered 4 rounds of this intensive organizer training program. This 4 month political education and leadership development program is designed to support the vision, strategy, and organizing skills of white activists in becoming accountable, principled anti-racist organizers building multiracial movements for justice.

Find out more information here:
http://collectiveliberation.org/our-work-2/the-anne-braden-anti-racist-organizing-training-program/

Back in September, while I was visiting Cree and Blackfoot territories in the city called Edmonton, I went to work and wrote up a zine (well, folks at APIRG suggested that I call it a novella as it runs about 104 mini-pages!) about my time during the Anne Braden Program. It’s a compilation of some of the blog posts from this blog, numerous journal entries, notes, hand outs, emails, images and thoughts from me.

I also created a .ePub format zine, so that you can download it and read it on your phone or some kind of e-reader thing (I don’t have devices that can do either of these things so I am just trusting that this might be useful to someone out there!) – thank you Bharat for helping me to create this. WordPress doesn’t seem to want to post this, however, so if you are interested, just email me! (annie bee at riseup dot net).

Here’s the zine! Reflections on my time as a participant in the Anne Braden Anti-Racist Training for White Social Justice Activists 2013

I wanted to post this zine by now as I am really excited to be doing two in-person share-backs on Lekwungen and Esquimalt territories. Here are the details in case you would like to come and hear more about the Anne Braden Program in person:

First, on Tuesday January 28 at 5:30pm:

Community Share-back about the Anne Braden Program (at the University of Victoria, location TBA):

Annie Banks recently spent 4-months participating in the Anne Braden Anti-Racist Organizing Training Program For White Social Justice Activists on Ohlone/Chochenyo territories (san francisco/oakland, ca) and an additional 3 months doing an internship with Californians United for a Responsible Budget, an anti-prison spending coalition group. In this share-back, participant input about what would be most useful to learn about or discuss will guide an informal conversation and space to share resources and knowledge.

https://www.facebook.com/events/266001240220500/?ref_dashboard_filter=upcoming

Then, on Thursday, January 30 I will be doing another share-back as part of the Camas Free Skool, at Camas Books and Infoshop (2620 Quadra Street, on Lekwungen Territory) at 7pm.

Both share-backs are by donation, with all proceeds going to support the Lekwungen Food Systems project.

Zine: Reflections on my time as a participant in the Anne Braden Anti-Racist Training for White Social Justice Activists 2013 by annie banks

Reading group meet-up Sunday Nov 24: NYSHN Webinar, “Violence on the Land is Violence on our Bodies: Criminalization, Incarceration and Resisting State Violence”

On Sunday, the reading group met and we together watched a webinar put on by the Native Youth Sexual Health Network (NYSHN), entitled “Violence on the Land is Violence on our Bodies: Criminalization, Incarceration and Resisting State Violence”, featuring speakers Erin Konsmo, Krysta Williams, Marmie Jotter, and Sarah Deer.

As mentioned in the previous blog post, this meet up was going to be based around resources by Winona Laduke, Chief Seattle and Elizabeth Castle and Madonna Thunderhawk, from the “Indigenous Resistance and the Colonization of North America” session of the Anne Braden Program.

However, as I was reading over the resources, I was finding myself feeling unsure about how to formulate questions based on these readings in a way that does not feel “anthropological” or like the group is “studying” Indigenous people but rather so that the group is listening to Indigenous voices speaking about the topics of Indigenous resistance and colonization (as all too often, white people speak for and about Indigenous people or are the only voices recognized as valid or “expert”).

I wanted to do this group as a way to share back the resources that I was privileged enough to have access to while attending the Anne Braden Program and as a way to practice how I as a white person can take responsibility for my own learning and for supporting the collective engagement, learning, and work of the people all around me, many of whom so generously share so much with community members all the time.

To me, it is critical that I be taking leadership from and holding up the voices of Indigenous people and people of color who speak, write and teach on the topics we are looking at in the group (as all too often, it is white people who receive credit for these ideas or are invited to speak, teach, write, etc. on topics such as anti-racism and anti-oppression, despite the many, many Indigenous and racialized authors, scholars, activists, community members, cultural workers, and more who do work on these topics (check out this blog post from the Becoming Collective for more in-depth thoughts on the phenomenon of “allies” getting more credit than the people who they are trying to be allied to)) – and , at the same time, I also don’t want to recreate the dynamic of Indigenous people and people of color always having to be educating on these topics.

So, instead of me deciding which questions to ask about the readings and our having a limited interaction with the resources (due to the questions coming from me and in this way limiting our conversation to my perspective on how to approach it), I felt it was more appropriate to find a way for people talking about these topics to speak for themselves and so when I saw that NYSHN was hosting a related webinar on the same day as the proposed meet-up, I, with feedback from participants, decided to center our reading group around the webinar instead of my questions about the readings.

I’m so glad that we watched this excellent webinar together. Erin Konsmo spoke about the powerful work that NYSHN is doing and gave many examples of the powerful work that many people and communities are making happen*.  Krysta Williams described numerous critical frameworks and concepts, including Free, Prior and Informed Consent, consentual allyship, and the origins of policing and the prison system in what is now called north america (“serving and protecting colonialism since 1492”). Included as well were slides with artwork by Erin and other artists. After Krysta, Marmie Jotter spoke – Marmie is the sister of Dana Deegan, an Indigenous woman facing a long prison sentence for a supposed “crime”, when a non-Indigenous woman charged with the same thing will not face any prison time and was instead given probation only. Marmie and Sarah Deer, who is an Assistant Professor of Law at the William Mitchell College of Law, talked about Dana’s case and described some of the requests for support for Dana. One of our group members is hosting a letter-writing event at her home, so some of us are going to attend to follow up on the request for letters of support for Dana.  You can also learn more about Dana’s case from this Youtube video, “Free Dana”.

*I was very fortunate to be able to interview Erin in 2012, about the impacts of resource extraction and reproductive health, which you can hear here on Terra Informa.

I often bookmark webinars but can honestly say that I don’t always watch them. It is different, to be invited to an online event than an in-person event, for me, and I realize that I don’t always treat webinars the same way that I treat, say, an in-person talk. This means that I miss out on incredible speakers like the line up of speakers on Sunday. To me, watching the webinar with the reading group meant that we consciously set aside time to watch this. It felt like important practice and a good reminder of the various tools available to enable collective learning like this.

I would highly recommend that folks check out the webinar here, which is now archived and available to watch anytime.

Our next reading group will focus on resources from the chapter, “White Supremacy, Capitalism and White Privilege” from the Anne Braden Program reader, as well as an article suggested by a group participant, entitled “Understanding Whiteness in the United States” by Judith N. Martin.

Reading group meet-up Sunday Nov 24: NYSHN Webinar, “Violence on the Land is Violence on our Bodies: Criminalization, Incarceration and Resisting State Violence”

Winter Reading Group

As I am now back in Lekwungen, Esquimalt and WSANEC homelands, I wanted to find a way to share what I was privileged enough to learn about in the Anne Braden Program and the resources that I had access to. I had been sharing readings from the program from afar, as I was living in Ohlone/Chochenyo territories, and so it seemed like a good fit to do something like a reading group when I came back here.

I was talking to my dear friend and comrade and we were discussing the phenomenon of trying to do everything or feeling like anything we do try to do is “not enough”. This often means that I end up not doing anything or feeling very scattered trying to do everything. This conversation really encouraged me to start a reading group, so I sent around a general email to friends and posted on Facebook that I was interested in doing this and invited people to refer interested people to me as well. While the training program was aimed at white people, I left the invitation to join the reading group open, as I have often been reminded that many people have not had access to these histories, resources and information and I also wanted to keep it open to anyone who is interested in learning more about the curriculum and resources we used during the Anne Braden Program and taking part in a discussion about them.

I had a really positive response and many people said that would like to take part. Some of the initial things that people expressed a desire for were a variety of resources in different formats (not just long essays and academic reading) as well as space to bring our own expressions of resistance and liberatory values. Additionally, some people could not physically attend meetings or could not commit to attending each month. The way the group is currently set up attempts to be flexible enough while still maintaining some degree of organization. It’s a work in progress for me but I’m enjoying the opportunity to accept “low-risk” feedback (it doesn’t feel as urgent or complex as when organizing actions or larger projects) and incorporate it. I feel like I’m learning a lot in doing this.

For the first meet up, I invited people to share something that inspired them personally.

“for our first meeting – whenever it happens – my hope is that we could each bring a short something that inspires us to share – a song (could be played via youtube or speakers or live), a poem, a few words, prose, a video, a picture, etc. – and then we could look over some options for something to watch/read/take in, over the next few weeks, and then plan another time to meet in person.”

I shared a poem by Martin Estrada (“Imagine the Angels of Bread”), which I first heard via the Catalyst Project. In addition, two participants shared inspiring pieces for us to look at/listen to/watch: “Maxwell Street” by Adam Gottlieb (video) and “The Problem with Privilege” by Andrea Smith (article).

At our first meet up (hosted by one of the participants and complete with tea, food, an awesome three-year-old, and a cat and accompanied by some crafting that related to a local project around honoring Indigenous land defenders for “remembrance day”), participants shared ways that they felt the group could function to include more people and to address some of the requests put forward by interested participants.

We discussed:

– meeting once a month in person for those who can and keeping a regular date/time

– having three resources each time, in different formats (video, audio, written, art, etc), from 8 different sessions of the Anne Braden Program Reader (which participants identified as the ones they are interested in specifically)

– having a buddy system for folks who can’t come in person, where people can “buddy up” to share readings with someone or they can follow along themselves and I can be available to chat via Skype if people are interested

– we also talked about going to community events together, doing collaborative projects, being outside and going on “field trips” – each month we’ll have a facilitator, which anyone can volunteer to be (means that you come up with some questions and provide physical copies of the resources so that people can come early to check out resources in person if they want to in case they couldn’t look them over before; there will also be time for a summary of the resources during the meeting)

Tomorrow is our next meet up and this is from the email I sent out about the resources that we will be looking at:

“for the next meeting, i picked three resources from the session “Indigenous Resurgence and the Colonization of North America”, a session which a number of people named as one they’d like to read and one that i personally think makes sense to start with, in recognition of the importance of addressing colonization and recognizing the long-standing and ongoing presence, resistance and resurgence of the original peoples of Turtle Island, on whose land this reading group is happening and where i/we live!”

These are the resources (from the Anne Braden Program Reader):

Winona LaDuke, “The Militarization of Indian Country” (interview) on Democracy Now!

Elizabeth Castle, “‘The Original Gangster’: The Life and Times of Red Power Activist Madonna Thunder Hawk” in Dan Berger, ed., The Hidden 1970s: Histories of Radicalism.

Chief Seattle, “Speech” at Synaptic.

In addition, there is a webinar happening tomorrow, put on by the Native Youth Sexual Health Network, entitled “Violence on the Land is Violence on our Bodies: Criminalization, Incarceration and Resisting State Violence”. I sent out an email suggesting we watch this together and listen to the speakers together at our meeting.

More to come after tomorrow’s meeting and discussion!

Winter Reading Group