Anti-racism conversation series concludes with focus on next steps for neighborhood

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Waite Park community members gathered Sunday, October 3, to finish a six-month conversation series on anti-racism and discuss next steps on how the community can continue to challenge systemic white supremacy. 

The gathering was an opportunity for participants to reflect on themes of the twice monthly meetings, which included topics such as raising anti-racist children, creating welcoming and inclusive neighborhoods, and challenging implicit bias. 

The series was facilitated by artists and Waite Park neighbors, Shá Cage and E.G. Bailey of Freestyle Films and Trú Rúts. As experienced community organizers, healers, and conversation facilitators, they created space and invited guest facilitators to challenge the group to lean into the discomfort that talking about race creates to think creatively about ways to unlearn internalized racism. 

The conversation series was funded by the Waite Park Community Council after community members suggested the idea to the board and more than 30 neighbors signed up to participate in the new initiative. 

At the final, and only in-person gathering of the six month series, members of the group discussed ways to continue the momentum on working toward becoming a more anti-racist neighborhood. Stay tuned to the newsletters for opportunities to engage in conversation with neighbors.

—Hayley Nemmers

Raising Anti-Racists: An Interactive Conversation with Ruth Chan

Join us June 7 for a special event of the Waite Park Anti-Racism conversation series featuring acclaimed artist and illustrator Ruth Chan.

Ruth will discuss the creation of her new children's book Thank You, Neighbor (as well as the real life neighbors that inspired the book!)

She will read the book and lead a discussion about the ways that books can help parents and families cultivate the values of inclusion and promote anti-racism.

This event is free, but registration is required and limited on a first come, first serve basis at tinyurl.com/wpars

Waite Park Anti-Racism program expanded due to popular demand

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Thank you to all who participated in last week’s kick-off to our anti-racism discussion series in partnership with Tru Ruts. Registration is full, but due to popular demand we are adding two new sessions that will be open to all:

Anti-Racism: What Can I Do?
Monday, April 19, 5:30-7:30 p.m.

Raising Anti-Racists
Monday, May 24, 5:30-7:30 p.m.

Both sessions will take place on Zoom. Registration is required HERE and limited to 100 people on a first come basis.

The programs are being led by artist/activists and community leaders E.G. Bailey and Sha Cage with support from neighborhood liaison Michelle Filkins and facilitators trained in diversity, equity, inclusion and anti-racism work. We recently spoke with Filkins about some of the themes in the series.

Q: What does anti-racism mean? 

A: The definition of an antiracist, according to Ibram X. Kendi, is “one who is supporting an antiracist policy through their actions or expressing an antiracist idea.” As is often pointed out in discussions around anti-racism, being antiracist is about more than not being racist. One key is that being antiracist is a conscious decision that often involves actions, big and small, that contribute toward racial justice. 

Q: Why is it important to have this conversation in Waite Park? 

A: There are a variety of reasons why we choose to live in Waite Park. Many rankings list Minneapolis in the top ten best places to live, yet Minneapolis has a legacy of exclusion. While the population of Minneapolis as a whole is approximately 63% white, the Waite Park neighborhood is 85% white. Waite Park is one of the communities in Minneapolis that once had discriminatory deeds, or racial covenants, on properties which prohibited non-white residents to live in or own property in the community. While racial covenants were outlawed in 1968, the legacy in terms of home ownership, generational wealth, and other disparities still persists. By having this conversation, we have an opportunity to imagine ways that we can make our neighborhood more welcoming and accessible to everyone, and at the heart of this is anti-racism. 

Q: What do you hope people will understand better after participating?

A: Thinking about the history and legacy of racism in our country can be overwhelming. After participating in this series of conversations, I hope that everyone will feel more comfortable having difficult conversations and contemplating the ways that we are all able to contribute to building a more just society. Being racist or antiracist are not fixed identities. Each day we will encounter situations where can take steps, big and small, that will help to build the kind of community we all want to live in. By promoting this sort of action, we are being antiracist. By the end of the series, I hope that everyone feels like they have a few more tools in their toolbox that will help them to embody antiracism and to advocate for antiracist policies.

Q: Our neighborhood has dozens, maybe hundreds of yard signs on themes of being “welcoming to all.” How does that idea compare to anti-racism?

Signs that are “welcoming to all” or that affirm that Black Lives Matter are important. Putting a sign in your yard can be an anti-racist action. Cumulatively, the lawn signs are signaling to our neighbors, and to all who visit, that we are interested in fostering a welcoming and inclusive community. But anti-racism is about a series of actions. We can’t stop with lawn signs. Antiracists will seek out opportunities to advocate for BIPOC neighbors in tangible ways. 

Q: A year or two from now, how do you hope our neighborhood is different because of these conversations and the relationships formed in them?

I hope that our neighborhood will be a place where all are truly welcome. That we will get to know our neighbors, and not just on National Night Out. That we will support our neighbors. I hope that this series of conversations is just a start, and that all of the attendees will continue to have important conversations and to ask difficult questions. I hope that we will be aware of and seek out opportunities to advocate for anti-racist policies and actions, whether within our schools, the Waite Park Community Council, or with city officials.

Please join us THIS THURSDAY for a community conversation on anti-racism

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In honor of Ahmaud Aubery, Breonna Taylor, Nina Pop, George Floyd and countless others whose lives were taken unjustly, the Waite Park Community Council is grateful to partner with Tru Ruts on a series of neighborhood conversations focused on anti-racism and transformative change. 

The discussions will be held over Zoom every 2nd and 4th Thursday from April through September. They will be led by artist activists and Waite Park residents E.G.Bailey and Shá Cage, who will work with neighborhood liaison Michelle Filkins and facilitators trained in diversity, equity, inclusion and anti-racism work.

Sessions will integrate conversation/discussion, often using books, essays and films as points of departure. Each session will be grounded in basic principles of respect and discipline allowing for the cultivation of honesty, debate, research, action and relationship building.

REGISTER HERE on a first come first serve basis as space is available. Waite Park residents and community members will be given priority, but other participants will be allowed if space permits.

Confirmations will be sent out by March 31st.

Tru Ruts and the Waite Park Community Council hopes this forum can grow to become a city-wide model for other neighborhoods.

E.G. Bailey, recently named one of Filmmaker magazine's 25 New Faces of Independent Film, and a McKnight Media Artist Fellow, is an Emmy and Ivey award-winning artist, filmmaker, director and producer. He has won several awards nationally and internationally and has contributed over 20 years to community organizing efforts in the Twin Cities using art to influence change.

Shá Cage is a consultant, a film and theater producer, director, writer and actress. She has been named a Changemaker by Women’s Press, Artist of the Year by City Pages and Star Tribune, a leading artist of her generation by Insight and a Mover and Maker by Mpls STP magazine with her co-conspirator E.G. Bailey. Her work and activism has garnered distinguished awards and has taken her across the U.S, to Japan, South Africa, England, France, the Netherlands, Mali, Croatia and more.

Neighborhood meeting: Learn about Waite Park's 2021 raingarden program

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Please join us on Zoom Thursday, March 25, at 7 p.m. for our monthly neighborhood meeting to find out how you could qualify for a discounted raingarden consultation and installation.

The Waite Park Community Council is partnering with Metro Blooms to help up to 20 homeowners in the neighborhood plan and install raingardens this season.

A raingarden consists of native plants and flowers arranged in a shallow depression designed to capture rainwater runoff. Water that would otherwise flow down driveways, streets and sidewalks is instead absorbed into the earth, which filters pollutants and recharges groundwater.

In addition to helping to keep our water clean, rain gardens provide habitat for pollinators and other wildlife, including the endangered rusty patched bumble bee. And they help prevent local flooding and relieve pressure on storm drains, making our neighborhood more resilient!

The first come, first served program will be subsidized by the Waite Park Community Council. Participants will be responsible for half of the on-site consultation fee and the cost of plants and materials. Information about how to apply will be released after the meeting.

Other items on the agenda for Thursday's meeting:

  • An update on the Waite Park Community Garden and 2021 budget

  • Planning for upcoming neighborhood anti-racism forum

  • Discussion of letter supporting fruit trees on boulevards

  • Discussion about neighborhood COVID-19 vaccine outreach

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