After a year off and many delays due to COVID 19, we held our annual in-person Community Organizing and Popular Education Institute (OI) this May. We also engaged this year’s cohort in three virtual Learning and Action Circles (LACs) before the Institute and one LAC after. Twenty-four participants representing ten groups and campaigns across the DC Metro region gathered for 5 days of learning, cross-pollination, somatics, art creation, theater, visioning, planning and trust building. The MM team revamped our OI curriculum this year, more deeply incorporating expressive arts, culture, and somatics into our organizing approach. In addition to a greater connection with the materials, these changes fostered a profound sense of connection and community within the group. “The art, healing and emotional processing in this Organizing Institute was life-giving. This on top of all the concrete skills, tactics and activities I’m taking back. I believe the relationships we built among organizers will make all of our base building and campaign work stronger and more joyful.”
2022 OI Participant. We greatly appreciate the contributions of many institutional and individual supporters of the 2022 OI, including the DC Eaton Workshop. The 2023 Organizing Institute will open again to organizers and groups around the US. We deeply appreciate everyone's enthusiasm and trust as we slowly return to in-person sessions. For more information on our Organizing Institutes or to bring an Organizing Institute to your organization or city, connect with us.
Movement Matters is based in Washington, DC. We work regionally with various communities and with national partners. We often express our gratitude to Dr. Ibrahim Abdurrahman Farajajé (may his secret be sanctified), dearly known to the many who studied with him as Ibrahim Baba. We are excited to share this beautiful album, Makam Shekhina, filled with traditional Sufi liturgies, Hebrew chants, and new creative compositions each with woven teachings from Ibrahim Baba. Makam Shekhina was founded by Sheikh Ibrahim Baba and Rav Kohenet Taya Mâ Shere through their immense delight of praying together in the realms of counter-oppressive devotion. Listen to Makam Shekhina. Read about the artists/the Makam Shekhina community, or purchase the album. Media shapes what we think is possible. It shapes our dreams while we sleep. It creates meaning we act on while awake. During this collective moment of extensive grief, anger and injustice, we as cultural workers must continue creating images, sounds, stories in ways that commits us to the future we want to wake up in; stories with memory and vision; stories that hold us, deepen us, and propel us towards action. Nowadays, (thankfully!), we see glimpses of it everywhere, it goes by many names and comes in many forms, but community media, liberatory media, essentially calls upon a production process that intentionally recuperates resistance memory for the sake of moving towards a regenerative future. Through community media, the production process becomes a way of organizing each other and connecting with other organized communities, deepening our relationship to important political work, and engaging people who would otherwise be excluded from decision-making processes. For examples and resources on contemporary approaches to community media across our movement check out our report: Beyond Access & Representation: Media Case Studies. We know all too well the rampant disinformation, silencing, and fear mongering that dominant media is unleashing onto our communities during this moment: a hyperfocus on crime and the need for police, an erasure of the real stories of excluded and “essential” workers, and mischaracterizations of campaigns that call to #CancelRent, #DefundThePolice, and #ExtendTheMoratorium. We recognize this type of media as a tactic of people in power within a larger strategy to remain in power and minimize the urgency for dissent. We recognize the impacts of this superficial and disconnected storytelling: retraumatization, memory loss, hopelessness, escapism. This tactic is not restricted to the US. We see the manufacturing of imperialist interests disguised as a call to revolution in the coverage of Cuba and other Caribbean and Latin American countries. We see a complete lack of coverage of African nations, unless there is sensationalistic violence that is reported without context. This media strategy extends beyond news coverage and permeates movies, television, and other “recreational” media controlled by dominant interests. The same biases and intent creep into our entertainment and, as a result, creep into our understanding of ourselves, our world, and its possibilities. Building on tools and frameworks from across our movement, Our Stories, Our Meaning: Advanced Community Media Studio will be an online space for content creators who are already using their craft as a tool to challenge power to focus on:
MM’s Advanced Community Media Studio is ideal for cultural workers and organizers who are developing a specific media project alongside a community organization or community formation (*this is not a technical training). Four online studio sessions will take place between October 1st and October 29th. The first two sessions will be all-day hands-on trainings, the third session will be 1-on-1's with participants and our studio leads, and the last session will be dedicated to presenting and receiving feedback on specific projects. Advanced Community Media Studio Online Sessions:Session 1: Media Rituals: Exploration, creation, and deepening of personal and organizational media rituals. Session 2: The Stories We Tell: Tools for identifying the root values in the stories we love, approaches to communicating these stories effectively across platforms to produce media for political education and campaign advancement. Session 3 (1-on-1s): Meet with facilitators 1-on-1 to discuss the specific media needs for campaign, check in on progress of media project, and debrief studio experience so far. Session 4: Feedback Circle: Present a first draft of your media project and receive feedback from other organizers and cultural workers. 14 online content hours + 2 hours of individual accompaniment + workbook & resources. Connect with us if you have any questions. For more information on our Advanced Trainings or to bring an Advanced Training to your organization, connect with us.
Movement Matters is based in Washington, DC. We work regionally with various communities and with national partners. How would the shows we watch be different if writer's rooms included our community leaders and organizational members? And how would that change the way we understand the world? Cultural workers, youth media organizations, filmmakers, public media advocates and organizers have all put in so much work for us to reach this golden age of QT-BIPOC film production, where access and representation are central tenets of equity in entertainment. Even as we celebrate, many of us hear the cautionary voices of our political elders telling us, “we have been here before!” And still many others hear, “there are still so many other ways and so much more we can attain!” These case studies provide but a fractal of the path that lies beyond access and representation; they point to radical institutional and systemic transformation, not just surface level change. To ensure our stories are as powerful as our vision for liberation, we must also center conversations around ownership, power, class, and the right to creative experimentation. Key lessons include:
Beyond Access & Representation showcases case studies that stretch all aspects of the production process to go beyond access and representation in dominant media and create our own pathways and platforms.
For more information or to access our other reports visit our Research and Reports webpage. Connect with us if you have any questions. Movement Matters began offering Community Healing and Action Circles (CHACs) in the summer of 2020 with the recognition that community members leading campaigns to support and create change are lacking spaces to heal and grow together. Our first series of CHACs was developed for laid-off restaurant workers who continue to organize themselves as they fight for the rights of their families and communities. These community leaders asked for a space to mourn the current moment, to heal and deepen their resilience, to care for themselves and their bodies given their limited resources and access to nature, and to build their public speaking skills as community leaders at the forefront. We created spaces of radical joy, reflection, and trust building by using culture, expressive arts (including dance, movement and theater), breath work, self-massage, medicinal plants, ritual, story creation and story telling to center healing, self-care/self-regulation, resiliency, and the decolonizing of voice, microphones, and 'public speaking' in its entirety. Our current series includes: CHAC 1 & 2: Breath, Movement, & Voice CHAC 3 & 4: Movement, Resilience, & Story Creation CHAC 5 & 6: Our Healing Traditions & Self Care The Community Healing and Action Circles are intentionally structured to build resilience within a community context. Participants are not just isolated individuals, but leaders of change efforts who are deeply connected to their constituencies. We mindfully cultivate each session to meet the emerging needs of the work, campaigns, and the broader membership of participants, ensuring that healing and capacity building are being integrated into the larger organizing community. We partnered with the DC Urban Sustainability Administration and Washington Parks & People, and have been holding these live, COVID safe, physically-distanced sessions at the Columbia Heights Green garden. We thank the Junte Comunitario Virtual and its community leaders in Puerto Rico for providing us with the safest strategies for in-person sessions during COVID times. We have moved the sessions online for the winter. The CHACs are being developed in conjunction with our Learning and Action Circles and our Dismantling Anti-Blackness Among People of Color work, both of which are oriented toward organizers and professional staff. For more information on our Community Healing and Action Circles, connect with us.
Movement Matters is based in Washington, DC. We work regionally with various communities and with national partners. Getting Tenants in Rhythm is the fourth and (for now) final online case example we created to support and inspire organizers, advocates, and community leaders during Covid19 and the current economic and racial upheavals.
Engaging community members where they live is a vital part of the organizing process. Even when we are limited in how we can gather, a building can be the cornerstone for developing community resistance and resilience. We have seen many examples of using pots and pans to create noise and show solidarity. With additional coordination, arts, and cultural elements, these actions can bring in new members, deepen constituency, and showcase the narrative of a campaign. We welcome questions, thoughts, and dialogue on these tools, including how to apply them to your particular initiative/campaign. Connect with us! Dynamic Demonstrations is the third of four online case examples we created to support and inspire organizers, advocates, and community leaders during Covid19 and the current economic and racial upheavals. Most of our tactics for change require a physical presence. As Covid19 continues to restrict our ability to gather, we have to find creative ways to put pressure on decision-makers. At the same time, we need to engage our members in actions, even when they can't be physically present. Many of our partner groups are combining limited in-person actions and artivism to create dynamic demonstrations. Layering in deeper member engagement and ownership of the arts development process can take these actions to the next level and build long-term membership and capacity alongside short-term political impact. We welcome questions, thoughts, and dialogue on these tools, including how to apply them to your particular initiative/campaign. Connect with us! Strengthening Networks is the second of four online case examples we created to support and inspire organizers, advocates, and community leaders during Covid19.
Engaging new members of loose networks and building relationships of trust and action with them and among them are key to creating a long lasting, active constituency; one that shares values, a vision for change, and the energy and focus to lead in making that change. We welcome questions, thoughts, and dialogue on these tools, including how to apply them to your particular initiative/campaign. Connect with us! As we continue to work closely with campaigns and other organizing projects during Covid19 we have been advising groups and organizers on how to adapt cultural organizing and deep constituency building to current physical distancing requirements—ensuring that the voices and leadership of community members are at the forefront of demands, actions, and solutions.
We developed our newest online tool to support and inspire groups during a critical time; to animate ideas that lean on creativity and perseverance so we can continue building constituency and grassroots power to make change. Cultural Organizing While Physical Distancing: Petition Drop is the first of 4 case examples we will be sharing over the next month. We welcome questions, thoughts, and dialogue on these tools, including how to apply them to your particular initiative/campaign. Connect with us! Colleague - comrade - compx:
: We stand with those who are protesting. : We stand with those who can’t join the protests but want to. : We stand with organizers. : We stand with our Black families and communities. We stand steadfast in our belief in and support of actions and expressions of rage and grief. We stand steadfast in our belief in and support of long term organizing and building institutions led by those most impacted by oppression and injustice. We stand steadfast in our belief in and support of movement building that envisions and enacts new ways of being and new ways of challenging anti-Blackness and white supremacist culture at an individual and organizational level. These beliefs are more critical in this moment than they have ever been; when the weapons of the state are being used to murder and silence Black lives, when Indigenous lives are destroyed for oil and profit, when immigrants are kept in cages, when Black trans women and men are brutally killed, when Asian-Americans are attacked and scapegoated for the Corona virus. The direction of our work has not changed, it has just become more urgent. Increased unemployment assistance is no longer the goal, universal basic income is. Rent remediation is no longer the goal, cancelling the rent is. Police accountability is no longer the goal, police abolition is. Let’s find deeper ways to engage with each other, with our communities, and with our work. Let’s find ways to transform these moments of protest and consciousness into long term capacity to organize for audacious demands. To meet the moment, our campaigns need to shift from short term, small incremental change to bold structural transformation. We love each of you who have been part of our network, of our community, of our home. We are with you to grieve, to rage, to strategize, and to build. You carry us forward as we find our way to be of most use at this time. Continue to be with us. Since Covid 19 we have been experimenting with different ways to hold space where appropriate, and to support others where we can. Join us when it feels right and possible. Call on us when you need to. Challenge us to do more/better when we need to. Keep fighting. Keep struggling. Keep feeling. Keep taking care of yourselves. We see you. ~ Movement Matters |
AuthorsMOVEMENT MATTERS Archives
October 2023
Categories
All
|