Monday, May 24, 2021

A Bridge Between Grief and Hope: Putting Ourselves Back Together as a Community



A Free Community Conversation with Amina Naru, Michelle Cassandra Johnson, Lakshmi Nair, Colin Lieu, and Dr. Terry Harris

Wednesday, May 26, from 3:00-5:00pm PT/6:00-8:00 pm ET

We will offer a community gathering of practice, candlelight vigil, affinity spaces, and conversations to process grief to make way for more hope; as we put ourselves back together again with the salve of our collective love for right action and social justice.

REGISTER HERE

This is a live online event shared via Zoom.
Free to attend. Captions available.
Replay will be available for those who cannot attend live.

-------------------------------------------------------------------------------

Last year, on May 25th, the world began to turn in a different way. All over the globe, people turned their attention towards a police officer, Derek Chauvin, taking the life out of George Floyd by placing his knee on George’s neck for 9 minutes and 29 seconds. We watched another heinous and horrific act of police violence against a Black man and the community that witnessed their brother be murdered. George was murdered on the heels of Breonna Taylor being shot while in her bed asleep and Ahumaud Arbery being murdered by two white supremacists while out for a jog. The landscape behind the continual murders of Black people was Covid-19, which had already shaken us all to our core. We were experiencing a global pandemic as it coincided with the ongoing pandemic of white supremacy.

White-bodied people began to awaken in a new way, reaching for resources, uplifting Black people on social media, gathering with white people in affinity spaces, protesting, and supporting the resurgence of the Black Lives Matter movement. Black people called for accountability, grieved out loud in the streets, protested, and fought for Black Lives to matter. Schools and roads were being renamed and confederate statues were being torn down. The entire world was on fire calling out George Floyd’s name around the globe.

White supremacy continued to ravage communities of color and many of us didn’t have time or space to grieve and care for ourselves. Racial trauma is the cumulative effect of racism on the heart, spirit, mind, body, and nervous system. Many Black, Indigenous, and People of Color are constantly in a hypervigilant state due to how persistent and consistent white supremacy is. When our trauma goes unattended and we do not have space to grieve this makes us sick, physically, emotionally, mentally, and spiritually. We need a space to pause and heal our trauma. We need a space to grieve together, in community. We need space to process the different ways we experience living in a white supremacy culture as white-bodied people and BIPOC people.

Join the contributors of the Evolution of Yoga Summit’s Race and Equity Track on Wednesday, May 26, from 3:00-5:00pm PT/6:00-8:00 pm ET for A Bridge Between Grief and Hope; Putting Ourselves Back Together as a Community. The Summit was a collaborative event between Yoga Alliance, Yoga Service Council, and Accessible Yoga. This event is free. Please join us and come exactly as you are.

° FOLLOW Accessible Yoga on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram, and YouTube.

° REGISTER here for our next conference.

° DONATE here to help us bring yoga to people who don't have access or have been underserved, such as people with disabilities, chronic illnesses, children with special needs, and anyone who doesn't feel comfortable in a regular yoga class.

No comments:

Post a Comment