Tuesday, April 26, 2022

Program Guest Speaker Report April 18, 2022

On April 18th, the BUF Black Lives Matter Action Ministry team welcomed councilwoman Kristina Michelle Martens as our monthly guest.

Ms. Martens started the conversation with her background and personal experience with white supremacy living in Southern California, which ultimately led her to move to Bellingham.  She explained that in Bellingham, she is often the only person of color in a given environment, a very different experience to what she was used to.  Once in Bellingham, Kristina became involved in social justice organizing, with help from the Chuckanut Health Foundation.  Her community organizing skills propelled her to greater visibility within Bellingham, ultimately leading to a recommendation that she run for city council, which she succeeded in doing in 2020.

The conversation shifted to examining the question of how to encourage diversity in the area.  It was noted that students of color attending Western Washington rarely stay in the area after graduation. Ms. Martens suggested that a community gathering place for people of color is missing and could be very beneficial for existing communities of color and would create a welcoming environment.  Finally, Ms. Martens discussed a memorial for George Floyd at Fouts Park on May 25.

Friday, April 22, 2022

Meeting Minutes of April 11, 2022

Present: Mike Betz, Cat McIntyre, Pam Graham, Murray Bennet, Claire Lending

And Rupert Ayton, Naomi Gary, David Curley (Co-Facilitators)

1. Anti-Racism Reflection Minutes
4/24 Michael Betz will speak on the 5/1 C2C/Tulip Workers March Event
5/1 Ask for teams that participated in the January CBC Accountability Process to provide their goals leading up to the next event 5/22
5/8 Same as Above
5/15 Same as Above
5/22 Naomi to invite the congregation to the CBC Accountability event at BUF that afternoon

2. Program Meetings
4/18 Speaker Kristina Michele Martens City Council Member at Large https://cob.org/gov/council/kristina-martens
Naomi to provide details on the 5/25 George Floyd Memorial Garden Event at Fouts Park
5/16 We made a wish list of speakers for future dates and will explore how we may pay speakers a modest honorarium out of respect…
Clyde Ford (local author)
Jason McGill (at NWYS)
Ed Bereal (local activist artist)
TeeJay Morris (Juneteenth Coordinator and local activist)
Demani Johnson (retired WWU professor)
Whatcom Human Rights Taskforce
Flo Simon (Interim COB Police Chief)
Debra Lekanoff (WA State Rep)
WWU Black Student Union representative

3. Reading Group Topics
4/25 The Sum of Us
5/23 undecided at this point

4. Other Topics Discussed
a. Interface with SEJC and Beloved Community
i. Naomi to write the SEJC Quarterly Reports and attend meetings
ii. Pam can help organize a regrouping of the Antiracism and Allyship training attendees
b. Process for knowing the monthly service themes and which services will have an AR reflection
i. David to reach out to Paul to confirm we can do ARs regularly
ii. Create a framework of content and themes for weekly ARs of approximately 3 minutes
c. Process for asking/volunteering to give upcoming AR reflections
d. How to enhance Facebook content
e. Polling the BLM mailing list for suggestions
f. Assembling and organizing anti-racism educational content
g. Linking with other BLM groups in Whatcom or forming a BLM chapter and creating a network map of all BIPOC groups
h. Maintaining a list of possible personal actions such as voting rights and school curriculum
i. Claire to help organize a UU the Vote event at BUF
ii. David to develop Micro Aggression response mini trainings
i. Maintaining a list of Black-owned businesses in Whatcom County
i. Pam saw a list at last year’s Juneteenth Celebration
ii. Claire found an article in the Bellingham Herald
iii. Rupert has an old list
j. Possible community projects—we have noted that Bellingham lacks a documented Black history and plaques memorializing locations of notable events
i. Rupert found resources at the library and at the local Cemetery

5. Social Media
a. Rupert to develop our Blog (especially as a resource of our programs and books)
b. Mike to help with RSS feed and subscription button
c. Rupert to expand our Breeze Mailing List

6. Community Actions
4/12 Covenant of Beloved Community Forum
5/1 Tulip Strike Victory March in Skagit County (volunteers requested)
5/7 Cat’s Going Away Celebration and BBQ at Lake Padden
5/22 All Aboard the CBC Accountability process live at BUF!
5/25 George Floyd Memorial Garden event at Fouts Park
6/4 Roaring 20’s themed Annual Auction Fundraiser for BUF

Next Business Planning Meeting on zoom:  May 9th 

Respectfully submitted
Naomi Gary, Co-Facilitator (naomiwwwgary@gmail.com)
Rupert Ayton, Co-Facilitator (rupertayton@yahoo.com)

Sunday, April 3, 2022

Anti-Racism Reflection of April 3rd, 2022

 On this day, in 1968, the Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was in Memphis, Tennessee and gave his “Mountain Top” speech in support of striking sanitation workers. He told the audience he had seen the Promised Land, but that he may not get there with them.  The next day, April 4th, at 6:01pm, he was assassinated.

Until I finished composing this anti-racism reflection, I was not aware of April 3rd’s significance. I am truly humbled by it, and hope my words honors it.

Books.

Be Here Now, the 1971 book by the late Ram Dass, came to mind as I initially thought about the theme of today’s service.  It brings back memories of those heady days of clashing cultures—conservative and liberal—and uplifting civil rights progress.

But I am here now, and it seems progress on our humanity to each other is slipping back to inhumanity.

D.L. Hughley said, “ultimately America is aspirational. Obama is what we would like to be.  Donald Trump and his supporters is who we are.”  I ask you, are we?

I see some Americans wanting to return our nation to Thomas Jefferson’s Anglo-Saxon state of landed male privilege.  I see angry parents banning books, and dictating what history is taught in schools—returning us to inhumanity.

The inhumanity to Black people followed by Jefferson, America’s leading “enlightenment thinker.” In his Notes on the State of Virginia, Jefferson implied Black people were lower order beings because they lacked the “finer senses” necessary to produce good literature. And worse.

Jefferson was wrong. Black poets and writers were producing great literature then, and definitely today.

Case in point, Bellingham author Clyde Ford and his personal coming-of-age story, Think Black.  Ford writes compellingly about a dark-skinned Black man, his father Stanley Ford, competing in the whitest of worlds—1950s IBM—and preparing his son Clyde for the same; which amounted to needing to be twice as good with only half the resources.

In Think Black, Ford educates us on life seen through a Black man’s eyes, the brilliance, the heroism, and the self-doubt, and the arc of American racism, all cleverly woven around the march of technology.  There is a quiet drama to it. It is, as he writes, authentic. Something I think we would all like to be.

Along the way, Ford exposes IBM as the ultimate soulless, capitalist machine, reaping huge profits from racism—the IBM behind Hitler’s efficient eugenics and South African apartheid.  Ford also takes us on a journey from early computing, and how the future was envisioned, to how the digital tools of our current world have been co-opted to abet hatred and inhumanity. And how to push back on that.

Ford is at heart a teacher. And that comes through in this well-conceived, well written book. A book “it is useful to have met,” to quote Be Here Now.

Interestingly, Ford relates that in the 1960s he attended Community UU Church in New York, drawn by their civil rights activities.  But he left UU in anger after MLK’s assassination.  Had white people failed him? 54 years later, we are trying not to.

Thank you.


Program Guest Speaker May 15th

On May 15th, our guest speakers were Barbara Miller and Adilene Calderone of Friendship Diversion Services.  This was the second of our prog...