SONG Atlanta Mentorship Cirle: new program kicks off!! [Oct. 16th application deadline...]

The SONG Mentorship Circle is presented by Southerners On New Ground (SONG), in collaboration with local LGBTQ activists all around the Metro Atlanta Area

A 6-Month long Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender & Queer-led & centered Co-Mentorship training for people committed or interested in social justice work that is cross-issue, anti-oppression, and meets at the crossroads of race, class, culture, gender and sexuality, towards encouraging the local capacity, unity and interconnection of people in the state of GA.

This program will meet twice (2) per month (every other week or so) for a period of 6 months to:

  • Share skills & political education critical in community organizing
  • Share strategies that people have implemented in their organizing, as well as a collective space to reflect, refine and grow those strategies
  • Build our political and personal relationships with other LGBTQ folks organizing in the greater Atlanta, GA area, who are also vested in the long-term community organizing & change the South needs
  • Create a consistent container that can hold a co-mentorship process towards reflection, growth and learning
  • People of color, people with disabilities, and immigrant folks are specially welcome…

    Please complete this application by Friday, October 16st, 2009 and return to BT@southernersonnewground.org
    0r send to us at: 250 Georgia Ave., Ste. 201, Atlanta, GA, 30312

    Mentorship Circle application[1]

    SONG Mourns the Death of Ms. Imaje Devera/Mr. Jimmy McCollough

    SONG mourns the murder of Mr. Jimmy McCollough (AKA Ms. Devera) on April 14, 2009. A known Drag Queen and Gender non-conforming LGBT man in the community in Fayetteville, NC, Mr. McCollough was presumably simply working the streets on the night he was murdered, trying to pay his bills. Signs point to his death as a hate crime. Like too many in our communities, he was a gender non-conforming person of color in the South, known to be a sex worker, and a presence in the community. SONG continues to be committed to working for a day when folks like Mr. McCollough are not victims of violence, and when lives and livelihoods such as his as seen as just as important and precious as any other life.

    Message from transgender community leader Janice Covington, written on the morning of April 14:
    “This morning, April 14, 2009, the murdered body of Image Devereux (Ms. Jimmy) was found on Joseph Street behind the old Club Spektrum in Fayetteville, N.C. She was a local Drag Queen who many of us knew as a friend. She will be missed but not forgotten. My prayers go out to her family.”

    If you know of any local organizing based in Fayetteville, NC that SONG could reach out to about this case, and efforts to organize around it please email us at: Caitlin@southernersonnewground.org

    (Information from Q Notes)

    Go to Q-notes website: for more information

    Hopes of a New Day

    With hopes of a new day, SONG members greet the inauguration of our new president. We lead with hopes for his presidency, not our fears. We hope that he will follow through on not only what he promised, but that he will use his thoughtful mind, his discipline, and his dignity to come to clarity around what is right with LGBTQ people, people in Gaza, and Immigrants in this country; as well as using his power in the service of all oppressed people. We give thanks for the groundswell of people who made this possible through organizing.

    We all need a chance to find our dignity, again, President Obama, it is one of the main reasons we organize. We look forward to a day when we all have access to it!

    SONG Statement and Public Release of SONG Org School Agenda!

    IGNITING THE KINDRED: A SONG ORGANIZING SCHOOL

    It is a time to focus on Surviving and Thriving Hard Times: this means understanding what is going on, and learning from past and current times about how to respond.
    In 2008, we are in a time of economic recession that means great struggle around housing and basic resources for our communities and family. We are in a time of global battle over access to water, food, and other basic resources. We are in a time of newly trained organizers in every state in the US, and a national conversation about what community organizing is and will be, in light of the elections. We are also in a time of spiritual and emotional struggle: in our relationships, our organizations, and our movements remain deeply divided, and without resources and capacity to re-generate and sustain ourselves. SONG works across lines of race, class, culture, gender and sexuality to strengthen and build our power to work together. Though our base is primarily LGBTQ, we hold our allegiance to the Southern struggle for justice as a whole. For more than 2 years, since Hurricane Katrina, we have been working hard on creation, vision, listening and innovation for our region. As we see it, this moment gives SONG as a collective organization 2 options: Not knowing what to do, and continuing to do the same thing, or Not knowing what to do, and trying something new—risking that it may or may not work. We have chosen the latter. We hope that others will do the same in their own way. For more than 2 years, we have worked on this Organizing School, to meet the conditions of the current moment. By meeting the current moment, we mean that we vision a region and a country where local communities are setting up our own infrastructures (what connects or links people collectively so they can get things done) in sustainable and well ways—these infrastructures are capable of meeting needs for basic resources; as well as capable of transforming trauma and pain, and multiplying and amplifying our resiliency and strength. The Organizing School is only one step in this process. The rest is up to ALL of us together. Folks have asked us to know more about the School, and now we are releasing more detail than we ever have before, in the hopes that what we have learned, mistakes we have made, and work we are trying out might help others in their work in critical times. This work involves the voices (directly and indirectly) of over 100 people in the South. It has had many different versions and formats. This is the latest. We share this with the knowledge that being part of a movement comes first before being a non-profit that fiercely guards information and material. We hope it is helpful to you in some way. We ask only that you credit those more than 100 SONG people when you borrow from it or use it.

    In Solidarity,
    SONG Organizing School Team (Paulina Hernandez, Cara Page, Suzanne Pharr, and Caitlin Breedlove

    PLEASE CLICK BELOW TO DOWNLOAD AGENDA FOR THE SCHOOL AND CORE VALUES OF OUR TEAM. TO APPLY FOR THE SCHOOL ITSELF SEE THE POST BELOW..WE ARE ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS PAST THE DEADLINE ON A CASE BY CASE BASIS, AS WELL AS A SET NUMBER OF PARTICIPANTS OUTSIDE LITTLE ROCK

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    core-values-for-our-work-together.doc

    BLOOM: Homegrown Spiritual Movement

    By SONG members Alexis Pauline Gumbs, Manju Rajendran & Isabell Moore

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    Published on: January 01, 2008 (first appeared in Left Turn Magazine)

    Ask most progressive activists and organizers to characterize this moment and you will hear about gloom (How can this man actually be president?) and doom (This war has no end. Our use of environmental resources is killing the planet). But writer, biologist, and UBUNTU activist Kriti Sharma, emphasizes this suggestion, “Even on the eve of the end of the earth, plant a tree.” (Musnad Ahmad, Hadith). Accordingly, while there is doom and gloom (or even because of these two circumstances) there must also be bloom: growth, life, celebration, and beauty sustained by deep faith and critical hope.

    This is not an obvious point. Many of us working on the Left are informed by Marxist, Anarchist, and other revolutionary traditions that focus on the role religious institutions have played in distracting oppressed people from their material conditions and maintaining capitalism, patriarchy, hierarchy, and dominance. We draw cynical conclusions about the potential of spirituality or religion—or ourselves—to build a just world, and we see the role that many faiths and institutions have played in reinforcing or justifying state power.

    “The religious right appropriated the name and the institution of the spirit-based movement for justice, they captured it and wrestled it to the ground in order to put a different spirit out there. They wedged, split, and promoted domination by a small minority. They are going exactly the opposite way under the rubric of religion in a way that violates the deepest meanings of spirit and faith. We can’t allow it to be done. We have to try to create an alternative because it’s so deceptively false, and because it’s the right thing to do,” says the Reverend Nelson Johnson.

    This section asserts that faith does not have to be either “false consciousness” deluding us into complacency or fear-based conservatism. Faith, used intentionally, can be one essential resource that allows us to sustain our action to create a world that is radically different than the one we are now surviving. The vectors of faith that we have named in the title of this section “religion” and “spirituality” have complicated relationships to each other and to our work. They are not interchangeable, they are not opposites and they are not necessarily companion terms, nor can either stand alone. While we have not arrived at strict definitions of “religion” and “spirituality,” we use both terms to gesture towards the places that we find our sustenance and faith.

    Some of us access our spirits through a particular religious tradition. Some of us engage in spiritual practice that has not been institutionalized or validated as “religion” in the US landscape, but nonetheless draws on traditions that have evolved over centuries. Some of us engage critically with established religions, seeking to transform institutional norms and access faith at the same time. Some of us are involved in particularly libratory strains of dominant religions. Some of us work with our ancestors to develop spiritual practices on our own terms. Some of us bravely inhabit and represent religious traditions that have been demonized and slandered by the Religious Right. Some of us read what Audre Lorde and Che Guevara say about love as scripture to guide our spirits through struggle.

    The three of us, all organizers living and working in the South for most of our lives, and currently all living in North Carolina, find our faith and our growth planted in this southern soil. We offer this piece, based on conversations with faith-full folks in our lives, as witness to spirituality and religion as resources for (and challenges to) movement building in the South, especially North Carolina, with the hope that it resonates for organizers in other regions of the United States.

    National murmurs

    There are increasing murmurs nationally toward welcoming spirituality and religion into Left spaces, and a growing faith-based radical movement. In the words of Stone Circles co-directors Claudia Horwitz and Jesse Maceo Vega-Frey, “We are moving toward a doing that grows more deliberately out of being; an understanding that freedom from external systems of oppression is dynamically related to liberation from our internal mechanisms of suffering.” Examples abound. At the SisterSong “Let’s Talk About Sex” May 2007 national conference in Chicago, women and trans people participated in large opening and closing spiritual ceremonies involving invocation of God(desse)s and ancestral spirits. At the first US Social Forum in June 2007, a Healing and Spiritual Practice Tent was one of the hubs of activity, hosting well-attended workshops, ceremonies, and therapeutic sessions. Kaliya Hamlin of Integrative Activism in Berkeley maintains a directory of over 300 programs and organizations connecting spiritual and religious practice with movement work.

    Vimala Rajendran, a devout Christian from a liberation theology perspective, and one of the co-founders of community access station The People’s Channel in Chapel Hill, says she feels more religious and spiritual people are leaning to the left lately, and more progressive people are turning to spirituality. “People are realizing that spirituality goes hand in hand with works on earth. Personal stories are showing them that we don’t have to be on our own. There is a force out there greater than ourselves, which is also inside of those who seek.”

    Transformative interventions

    Many of the spiritually based activists, organizers, and community builders we spoke to saw spirituality as a key intervention into the often toxic culture that hurts us as individuals and invades our movement customs. They told us that their practices of faith had potential to be both personally healing and transformative of movement culture.

    “The reason we are learning how to heal, by practicing on ourselves is because our movement needs healing,” says Nia Wilson, executive director of SpiritHouse. She describes the basic spirituality sustaining her work and healing as a belief in “first breath”. In Alex’s Story, an audio record of her journey of healing from sexual assault, she says, “Our first breath is divine. It is who we really are. Healing means honoring that first breath. We can always get in touch with our purpose for living.”

    Purpose and spirit are central to the work of SpiritHouse, which uses art, self-expression and resource distribution to affirm the bodies, minds, and spirits of Durham’s black communities. In all their innovative programs, they use spiritual and healing practices to create a space where “our whole selves are safe and held.” Wilson and other members of the organization see this spiritual work as more and more necessary in a progressive movement characterized by burnout, exhaustion and pain.

    For Afiya Carter, former director of the Weaver Street Community center in a public housing community, and current special events coordinator for W.D. Hill Community Center, both in Durham, spirituality provides a needed critique to the norms of movement culture. She remembers getting involved with local activism as a young mother and realizing “there was no place for kids to go.” Meetings that swallowed up what she calls her “hard earned time” and offered neither food, nor childcare, nor any other form of nurturing seemed to guarantee that working-class people would be excluded.

    Carter, a practicing Muslim since her early childhood, was taught that the Prophet Mohammed married enslaved, disabled, and otherwise shunned women to prove that all people were worthy of respect and love. She was taught that according to Islamic law, women were never to be considered the property of men and that the education and freedom of women was the measure of a strong community. Her grandparents’ belief in religious diversity gave her a “broadened sense of who was in the world and who was valid,” and taught her that difference is a requirement for organizing. Afiya’s spirituality leads her to create community events that include centering the needs of mothers and children and embrace the complexity of communities in the making.

    Spiritual practice can also transform our erotic selves and bring erotic spiritual energy into our movements. Calling her speech at the 2007 SisterSong Reproductive Justice Conference “testimony to those who have lost their bodies and lives in our communities through being commodified, criminalized, sexualized, colonized, and stigmatized,” Cara Page, creator of Deeper Waters and national director of the Committee for Population, Women and the Environment, invoked countless unknown ancestors as well as one specific ancestor, Audre Lorde. “When we are able to be sexual voluntarily and consensually we are able to have the freedom of choosing to receive touch and to give it, to receive energy and life and to give it, to possibly even receive love and transform it.” So creating community requires understanding our own relationships to life, energy, and love in the face of social and physical death.

    Caitlin Breedlove, co-director of Southerners On New Ground (SONG) notes that since she and co-director Paulina Hernandez have turned the organization over to their deep faith in the queer working-class people of color communities that they are building, “things just started to go right with SONG.” Breedlove notes that working in a community committed to her whole spirit makes her less susceptible to burnout because she understands that she is valued through a long-term love relationship, not the need for immediate results. While many organizations focus on being against, “We can organize around longing,” Breedlove testifies, “We can organize around love.” Breedlove and co-director Paulina Hernandez envision their upcoming organizing schools as “revivals,” not as extended workshops or places for skill-accumulation, but rather as ways to “ignite the kindred,” to wake up our souls.

    History and tradition

    While spiritual and religious based movements may look “new” to some, many of the organizers who blessed us with stories draw on spiritual teachings that they recognize as historically rooted strategies for the survival of oppressed people. When asked whether he sees a major “increase” in spiritual and religious organizing in the South, Russell Herman—who coaches organizations and organizers to strengthen movement-building across North Carolina—says, “I’m not prepared to say there’s a big increase, if you take a 50-100 year span. I do see more religious language being used in contexts where I didn’t see it, oh, 20 years ago maybe—but I wouldn’t call that faith-based movement work. One factor is an unconscious adoption of the religious tone of the current mainstream society. And then sometimes there’s a deliberate attempt to use the mainstream language to communicate with people who are most used to that language. For some organizers, that is their language.”

    Many organizers also told us that they purposefully both draw on and update traditional practices to strengthen their organizing. Omisade Burney of Anansi Productions, a consulting organization based in Durham, explains, “I believe in the interconnectedness of spirituality and activism and the mighty and righteous work of indigenous leaders tethered to ancestral imperatives in local communities and small organizations.” Burney tells us this intersection of spiritual grounding and movement has a long history in communities of color, from Yoruba, an African-based spiritual practice based on the belief that ancestors communicate and look after those of us living in the present, to the theology of elders from the civil rights era.

    Black christian churches are perhaps the best known—though not the only—originators of spirit-based movements in the Southeastern United States. Many organizations drawing on African-American and working-class traditions of struggle in the South are currently involved with challenging the mainstream appropriation of religious spaces as havens for conservative, anti-worker, homophobic, and anti-feminist values through a faith in the present potential of Southern communities.

    In Greensboro, the Beloved Community Center (BCC), draws on Martin Luther King Jr.’s concept of beloved community and “works towards social and economic relations that affirm and realize the equality, dignity, worth, and potential of every person.” Reverend Nelson Johnson, one of the founders of the group, started his activism as a student liberal integrationist, then was a Black power advocate, next a pan-Africanist, then a labor organizer and student of Marxism, and is now a is a pastor of Faith Community Church. “We are all spiritual and everything is spiritual. Spirit is inherent in being. Through all my different periods as an organizer, I was driven by a sense of spirit.”

    Johnson and the BCC work closely with Word and World, a Greensboro-based national organization that draws the theological work of Black civil rights leaders into the present. Word and World, a popular education school committed to reinventing theological practice for social justice, practices biography as theology, literally reading the lives of activist leaders as the work of God, and therefore as scripture to build faith for movement in the present. As they plan their next school to focus on the life of Audre Lorde, Word and World refuses to translate theological work into nostalgia for the past, or a conservative view of the present. They exemplify a tradition-based but future-oriented theological practice of community embrace that resonates with the work of the Washington, DC-based Al-Fatiha Foundation (see organizational profiles).

    At their most recent school in July of 2007, Word and World partnered with the Beloved Community Center and the Southern Faith Labor and Community Alliance (SFLCA) in a focus on economic justice and issues effecting North Carolina workers. Founded in 2005 in Greensboro, the SFLCA framing document, authored by the Reverends Nelson Johnson and J. Herbert Nelson, states, “We believe that Dr. King’s theological understanding that ‘unearned suffering is redemptive’ speaks to the rich treasure of suffering born out of slavery and Jim-Crowism. This treasure can flow into a transformative movement with work and labor at its center.”

    They make it clear from the beginning, “From the perspective of faith, the South has reflected the dual trend of progressive, relevant theology on the one hand and backward, negative theology on the other hand. Since the Reconstruction period, the South has exerted a disproportionate negative impact on national priorities, including the refusal to uphold the dignity of work and value of those who carry it out on a day to day basis.”

    The religious right and even some liberal Christians have traditionally interpreted all faith journeys as striving towards the afterlife, trying to earn a place in an always future heaven. But Beloved Community Center, SFLCA, and Word and World all are organizations that challenge this notion. Johnson asks, “How can we continue on the vocation of becoming more human? It’s different than just trying to get to heaven. Most people think you have to suffer on this earth, then leave to get to heaven, but Jesus is trying to help you make heaven here.” Faith-based movements are thoughtfully drawing on deep tradition while bravely shaping that tradition in new ways to aid in liberation as they forge a path forward.

    Challenges forward

    Stories of transformative faith and rooted spiritual traditions were not all we heard. We also received words of caution by many connected to this burgeoning movement. Growth is a complex process, embattled and facilitated by environmental factors at every turn. Johnson explains, “A theologian once said the best place for God to hide is in a church. I sometimes think the best place for God to hide is in religion. Religion is both a place to trap the spirit, and a potential place to release it. We must recognize that it has potential to trap the spirit if we want to be able to use religion to release spirit.”

    Rishi Awatramani, recent transplant to North Carolina and participant in the Buddhist Sanctuary program for activists and organizers (see organizational profiles) also points out that spiritual practice is not above commodification, noting that “The commodification of Eastern religion as Western spirituality has given rise to a Spiritual Wellness Industry, and movement activists and organizers in the US consume spiritual widgets, much like the rest of society. The conversation of spirit and self-care is not in itself wholly organic to the movement, and reflects movement-building deficiencies as much as it reflects the echo of capitalism reverberating throughout civil society.” Awatramani practices a focused spiritual love within his community while maintaining a larger systemic analysis that applies to the dynamics of movement building.

    When asked why people he knows organize in religious spaces, Russell Herman answers, “The main strands of that thinking seems to be that religion—and here [in North Carolina], mostly Christianity—is a main influence on the thinking of the public, therefore it’s useful to have your ideas be available in that venue, and if possible, promoted in that venue.” Herman warns about the danger of elevating religion and spirituality to the point that they seem to be the only contexts for human connection. This could not only leave people with out explicit spiritual practice out of the conversation but also limit our awareness of tools we can use to transform movements.

    Herman also notes, however, that churches are also strategic resources for movement building. “People are there. You go where the people are. And some people share the belief—since they are there anyway, they organize there. Some people’s analysis tells them that it’s a key element of society that needs to be organized…In certain sectors of society churches are one of the few economically autonomous institutions that are somewhat democratic.”

    Awatramani challenges, “Where do we remember that it is people’s (real and perceived) relationship to ownership that more often than not determines their compulsion to rise up, how much of their heart they give of themselves? The time has come, I believe, to understand the true class character of the non-profit sector and of the spiritual activism networks in order to best understand why old limitations persist and new trends have emerged within our movement-to-be.” While spirituality, religion and faith may provide strength to movements, we must not see them as a catch-all, fix-all that will suddenly make everything work.

    While Awatramani’s spiritual practice has strengthened his movement work and relationships, he warns us not to allow faith in spiritual practice to make every challenge of struggle a measure of our failure to approach divinity, “Let’s not forget…that our movement suffers not just because we’re not spiritual enough in our work, but also because we toil in the belly of the beast, with few successes, and no movement…yet.”

    It is these challenges that inspire us to make the work of spiritual and religious organizations and organizers visible in this special section, to spark a conversation within the Left about how we can critically love religious and spiritual traditions, plant deeper faith, and produce creative energy in our movement. And bloom…

    About the Authors

    Alexis Pauline Gumbs is a member of SONG, UBUNTU, and SpiritHouse and is the founder of Broken-Beautiful Press Feel free to contact Alexis at alexispauline(at)gmail.com.

    Manju Rajendran is a 27-year old Desi based in Durham, North Carolina. Her mama is Christian, her papa is Hindu, and she’s just saucy. She is a proud member of UBUNTU, SONG, Future5000.com and the Not Your Soldier advisory board. Holla: manju.rajendran(at)gmail.com.

    Isabell Moore is a 27-year old white chick based in Greensboro, where she is proud to be involved with Cakalak Drum Corps, Southerners On New Ground, the Fund for Democratic Communities and the Leadership and Empowerment Institute. She is currently an MA student in Women and Gender Studies at UNC-Greensboro. Contact her at zed(at)riseup.net.

    Check out these resources: http://www.integrativeactivism.net/spiritual_activism.html

    Victory in South Carolina!

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    Letter from the SC Equality Coalition about victory in South Carolina!
    —————————–

    Greetings,

    I have some exciting news to report! Just minutes ago, the Columbia
    City Council voted unanimously to pass ordinances prohibiting
    discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation or gender identity
    in housing and public accommodations. South Carolina Equality
    proposed these ordinances in January and the ordinances passed with
    little opposition. Please see the attached press release.

    We have passed one of the most comprehensive local ordinances in the
    United States, in one of the most conservative states in the country.
    These ordinances represent the most significant advance in GLBT rights
    in SC, in the history of our state.

    When we work together, when we’re focused, when we’re strong– there
    is no limit to what we can accomplish. We have re-launched South
    Carolina Equality in the last three months, and look at what we’ve
    been able to do, together. With your help, South Carolina Equality
    will take these ordinances to other cities in the state and continue
    to work at a local level.

    South Carolina Equality worked closely with the SC Gay and Lesbian
    Pride Movement and the Harriet Hancock Center, coordinating activity
    and building support. None of this would have been possible without
    the efforts of Council Members Daniel Rickenmann and Tameika Isaac
    Devine and Mayor Bob Coble.

    South Carolina’s Capital City is the first municipality in the state
    to pass comprehensive human rights ordinances in housing and public
    accommodations including sexual orientation and gender identity.
    Columbia joins two other cities in the “Deep South” that have passed
    comprehensive anti-discrimination ordinances – New Orleans and
    Atlanta.

    Warm Regards,

    C. Ray Drew
    Executive Director
    SC Equality


    P.S. They say that commitment isn’t about the time you spend, but the line you cross. Look behind us. That’s where the line is now.

    Mia Mingus Accepts Creating Change Award 2008

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    (Above: Caitlin Breedlove, SONG Staff, and Mia Mingus
    at the US Social Forum 2007)

    Amazing Atlanta-based SONG member Mia Mingus accepts the Creating Change Award 2008! Read her in her own words below, as she accepts the award last week in Detroit, MI! Congratulations, Mia, we love and honor you!!

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    SONG & JASMYN Organizing School!!!~ Going down on January 11-13 & 18-20 in Jacksonville, FL

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    Southerners On New Ground (SONG) & The Jacksonville Sexual Minority Youth Network (JASMYN)
    Present:

    The SONG Organizing School!!!
    (For Jacksonville, FL & surrounding areas)

    Two-weekend advanced training for people committed to social justice work that is cross-issue, anti oppression work that meets at the crossroads of race, class, culture, gender and sexuality , towards building the local capacity, unity and interconnection of people in the greater Jacksonville, FL area.

    It’s all going down: January 11 – 13 & January 18-20, 2008

    With additional optional Studio/Experiential & Workshop Intensives taking place between January 15-17, 2008
    (Save The Date & tell your FOLK!!)

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    Application Deadline: Friday, December 24, 2007

    If you are interested?? Want to know more information?? Want to apply??

    If you are in the Jacksonville, FL area, contact JASMYN:
    Phone: 904.389.3857 // Email: garrettboardman@yahoo.com or
    mindymiddleton@hotmail.com // Check out our website: www.jasmyn.org

    For more information on the Organizing School,
    (including information on future ones!) contact SONG:
    Phone: 919.286.3230 // Email: kindred@southernersonnewground.org

    “…we cannot live without our lives” ~ Audre Lorde

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    SONG & JASMYN Organizing School / Jacksonville, FL
    January 11 – 13 & January 18-20, 2008

    Some of the topics & themes of the Organizing School will be:

    CONSCIOUSNESS RAISING
    · Connections of liberation work within LAND, BODY, SPIRIT & LABOR
    · Legacy of Revolutionary Political Movements & People
    · Role of Gender & Sexuality within colonization & liberation.

    SKILLS-BUILDING
    · Popular Education.
    · Healing / Memory / Reclamation work.
    · Building democratic & equitable structures and groups.

    The SONG Organizing school is a two-weekend sub-regional training intensive in collaboration with JASMYN, based on community organizing, starting at the premise of broad-based social justice work. It is an advanced training and opportunity to meet the needs of leading community organizers & movement people from the greater Jacksonville, FL area.

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    It will give 20 live & ready organizers & members an intense & deep opportunity to do some consciousness raising as well as skills-building into the fundamentals of movement building, healing & sustainability work, and anti-oppression, liberation work…. Southern style’… guided by the experience, heart & vision of other working class, People of Color immigrant Queer / Lesbian Gay / Bisexual / Transgender & Gender-non- Conforming folks living in the Southeast…

    This is not a queer-exclusive space, but it is based on the premise of work and experience born out of the connections, lives and intersections within queer communities.

    This organizing school is intended and targeted to meet the needs of youth, youth organizers, and folks from organizations, groups and collectives who have at least a year’s experience in community work ~ to help those emerging, as well as more seasoned organizers take their political work, thinking, connections and strategies to the next level. This is not intended to be an introductory training to organizing or social justice work.

    Our work, as well as the mission and strategy for this school is out of the belief that while the South as a region is underfunded, and the work & achievements of our communities often invisible and minimalized… that we are the legacy of amazing communities, elders, queers, people of color, and working-class people who’ve been making it happen each and everyday. It is our hope that we can expand, as well as deepen our skills, understanding, and ability to continue engaging inter-generational, multi-racial, multi-gendered communities in our own liberation & survival…please join us!!

    But Some of Us Are Brazen… Lust for a Black Queer Community

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    Written By: Alexis Pauline Gumbs

    First published on September 8, 2007 in Trea’zure Magazine

    Girl, you want this. You know it. You would stand in line for it. Waste your time for it. Work all year to pay for it. You would dress up for it. Strip down for it. Travel out of town for it. You would scheme, dream, sell your soul for a pass at this. You wake up wanting this, and you pass out dreaming it too.

    And no. I’m not talking about sex, and I’m definitely not talking about money. I am talking about what we really want. The need that races your heart to the beat of the next black gay pride celebration. Queer black women like me and you stay up all night craving a community where we can be ourselves and express our love freely. We know that we deserve to feel at home everywhere we go. We deserve to be reflected lovingly in the eyes of strangers. We deserve to feel well-fed and safe in the homes we create.

    But we are deprived. Everyday we experience the unwanted advances of disrespectful men and boys as we walk down the street. We work at jobs where we can’t be open about our sexual desire for women. We consume TV shows and music that ridicule or ignore our lives. We get harassed when we hold each other’s hands. And worst of all we are subject to racist, sexist and homophobic violence at all times. And the law does not protect us.

    So we take what we can get. Because we are desperate for the sight of each other. We thirst to remember we exist. We pay full price for watered-down drinks at the one club in town that has a gay night and plays hip-hop. We drive for hours and shell out even more money for overpriced nightlife events at Black Pride celebrations around the country. We bear a party scene that is reminiscent of a second-rate hip-hop music video with neither a hook, nor a storyline. We even accept disrespect and stay in abusive and unhealthy relationships because love seems so hard to come by.

    And we are not wrong for this. It is no surprise that after 10 months of keeping our desire for women under wraps we go buckwild at “hot-body” contests and pad our pockets with one dollar bills for go-go dancers. And this is definitely not meant to disrespect those of us who dance to support ourselves and our families.

    But we deserve MORE than two nights of extreme sexual expression to sustain us for the next year of silence, fear and repression. And the fact that we survive invisibility and violence from the larger society along with violence and disrespect in our OWN spaces and keep coming back for more is proof of how much we want each other.

    In these, the worst of circumstances our need for each other does not die. The fact that we have enough energy to keep funding the less-than-perfect spaces that are available to us proves that we ALSO have enough energy to create something else. An empowering community is not something we can buy, barter for or pay admission to get into. It is not waiting for us at the next chocolate city “Girl Ball”. Community is something we have to make ourselves.

    This magazine is an example of black queer women coming together to create a space of empowerment and mentorship for each other, and this is just one example in a rich tradition. For example, the Combahee River Collective, a group of black lesbians in Boston in the 1970’s held retreats and did day to day organizing to fight violence against women, win more jobs for black people in black communities and eventually created Kitchen Table Press a publishing company especially for women of color centered on the writings of lesbians. Today, magazines like this and publishing companies like RedBone Press continue that legacy along with the other community organizations and informal support networks that keep us alive. Community is something that WE create ourselves.

    And I believe that we can, because those of us who are brazen enough to endure spike heels and shiver half-naked for the attention of other women, those of us who are bold enough to bend gender and shine studly despite what the men on the street might say or do in response, those of us who insist on being ourselves no matter what anyone says are warriors. Those of us who are BRAVE enough to do anything for the possibility of love are also STRONG enough to go for the real thing.

    Alexis Pauline Gumbs is queer black trouble-maker, a freedom seeking writer, a PhD candidate in English, Africana Studies and Women’s Studies at Duke University the founder of BrokenBeautiful Press & a SONG member. She lusts for community, so email her at alexispauline@gmail.com.

    Controlling Our Communities Through Our Bodies ~ Cara Page speaks out at SisterSong’s 2007 Conference

    Controlling Our Communities through Our Bodies

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    “We need to find the compass to map our own territories and borders of our sex, sexuality, gender, and our erotic”.

    Poetic Speech given at SisterSong Conference Spring 2007 ~ By Cara Page

    SONG member Cara Page is also the National Director of the Committee on Women Population and the Environment; she is a queer of color artist, organizer, and healing arts practitioner. A recipient of the Rockefeller Foundation Next Generation Leadership Fellowship (2000 – 2001) and awarded for her leadership and contributions as an artist and activist for human rights by the National Center for Human Rights & Education. She is a founder of Deeper Waters, a company providing reflective and creative practice as tools for organizing and individual and collective transformation. (cara@cwpe.org or deeperwaters@gmail.com)

    Check out her amazing speech!!~
    Cara Page of CWPE speaks out at SisterSong Conference 07