CAAL – Support MN’s HF3434: Ethnic Studies Bill The Ethnic Studies bill (H.F. 3434) incorporates Ethnic Studies into social studies graduation requirements, requires the commissioner to adopt ethnic studies standards, and establishes a task force to advise the commissioner on ethnic studies standards and curriculum for the State of Minnesota. Thank you Rep @CedrickFrazier for introducing our Ethnic Studies Bill (H.F. 3434)!"All students deserve to see themselves in their curriculum. Ethnic Studies is beneficial to all students." pic.twitter.com/sXmnnV2cdk— Coalition of Asian American Leaders (CAAL) (@CAALMN) February 23, 2022
Stop AB969! No Armed Cops in Schools February 10, 2022 WISCONSIN – Tomorrow the Assembly Committee on Education will hear public testimony on Assembly Bill 969, which would give the state of Wisconsin grounds to put armed police, otherwise known as School Resource Officers (SROs), back in our schools. LIT, our coalition partners, and other supporters condemn this attempt to disregard the voices of communities across the state that made the decision to end police department contracts and removed armed police from their district schools. All students deserve to feel safe at school – regardless of their zip code, race, or background. Threatening students with policing does not make students, faculty, or staff safer. Our communities want and deserve real solutions to promote school safety and help students thrive on and off campus. That starts by listening to, respecting, and acting on the interests of students across the state of Wisconsin. That means keeping cops out of school so young people feel safe. Go to Bit.ly/STOPSRO to fill out the form that will send a pre-written email to your legislators – it only takes 2 minutes! Legislators have proposed State Assembly Bill 969 This bill would give the state grounds to put School Resource Officers back in our schools. You can stop this by emailing your legislators and asking them to VOTE NO on AB969. pic.twitter.com/Mmn1rLo3lF— Freedom, Inc. (@AboutFreedomInc) February 10, 2022
Address Anti-Blackness through Racial Justice Discourse As we continue to work towards social and racial justice, incidents of anti-racism and xenophobia in AAPI communities has also brought forth calls for racial solidarity to dismantle anti-Blackness in our communities and understand the role of white supremacy in our struggles toward shared liberation. Here are some ways to take action, continue your education to address anti-blackness, and help fight against attacks on social justice discourse: VAYLA’s AAPI Rising: Uplifting AAPI Means Dismantling Anti-Blackness Event – Over the past year, the uptick of anti-Asian incidents has reminded us that racism and violence against AAPIs is not new. Through much grief and pain, our AAPI community is strengthened through solidarity. As AAPI communities move forward and overcome increased anger, fear, and violence, it is critical for us to recognize and dismantle anti-Blackness in our communities and understand the role of white supremacy in our struggles toward shared liberation. Watch the recorded session and listen to the community and conversation around addressing anti-Blackness with our own family, community, elders, and navigating internalized white supremacy. Join the crucial fight to defend the truth with the African American Policy Forum’s #TruthBeTold Campaign – “After unprecedented global protests for racial justice that followed the killings of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor, right-wing groups across America instigated and intensified well-funded, orchestrated disinformation campaigns against critical race theory, intersectionality, and other forms of racial and gender justice discourse.” Visit their website to learn more about how to respond to these organized attacks and find the latest updates from the disinformation and legislative campaign against critical race theory, social justice discourse, and race and gender education. This website also offers articles, research, and critical analyses that help explain the who, what, where, and why of the coordinated attacks on critical race theory, racial justice, and anti-racist education (including useful explainers of critical race theory, research into the structure of the disinformation campaign, political analysis, and more). As an organization of Muslim women committed to building sisterhood and advancing social equity, Reviving the Islamic Sisterhood for Empowerment has continued to open space for our community to learn and grow as anti-racist activists, advocates, and allies. Please visit their anti-Blackness resource page to learn about places to begin or continue your anti-racism journey. Empowering Pacific Islander Communities invites Black Pasifika specifically to join in conversation with one another to share space and perspectives from the skin you live in as Black AND Pacific Islander. This discussion will be facilitated by Jason Finau and Savali Andrews, two maternal cousins with a shared identity but different upbringings and journeys forward as African American Samoans raised on the west coast in the US. This space will convene on the second Friday of every month. “Black Pacific Alliance Join us every 2nd Friday for conversations on the Black + PI experience. Our next meeting is Friday, January 14th, 2022 | 6-8 PM (PT) For more info or to join, please contact: [email protected].” This thread includes 7 Ways Non-Black People of Color (NBPOC) Perpetuate Anti-BlacknessRead it. Learn it. Recognize it. Change it.Artwork by IG@southasians4blacklives#AAPIrising #asians4blacklives #AAPI4blacklives#APAHM #NOLAnews pic.twitter.com/hMkrvTzqJt— VAYLA New Orleans (@VAYLANOLA) May 27, 2020 Learn how the model minority myth is used to perpetuate anti-Blackness and ultimately hurt Asian communities. Repost from @Gfxprints#AAPIRising #AsianAmericans #solidarity #insolidarity #modelminoritymyth #modelminority #antiblackness #socialjustice #blackactivism #asians pic.twitter.com/ESeLqAOSCn— VAYLA New Orleans (@VAYLANOLA) February 17, 2021
You, Me & White Supremacy Continues: MARCH 10-APRIL 7 4-part webinar series will touch on the anti-Asian violence that has been in recent news, as well as the longstanding history of sinophobia in the United States that has allowed for this escalation. We will also be doing a brief bystander intervention training that will allow participants to walk away from this webinar with some information about de-escalation and non-carceral options for communities to explore when harm or violence does occur. Register for the event. View this post on Instagram A post shared by Advancing Justice Atlanta (@advancing_justice_atl)