Kellogg Foundation Conference Urges Americans to Heal Racial
W.K. Kellogg Foundation Conference Urges Americans to Heal Racial Wounds and Work Together toward an Equitable Future
Will take "sustained, hard
work" says keynote Michelle
Alexander
Asheville,
N.C. - The W.K. Kellogg Foundation (WKKF) opened
its four-day 2013 America Healing conference with a rousing
appearance by civil rights lawyer and advocate Michelle
Alexander, who decried the mass incarceration of people of
color as intolerable.
Alexander, an associate
professor of law at The Ohio State University, is the author
of "The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of
Colorblindness," a book that WKKF president and CEO Sterling
Speirn called "a bold and searing argument" about
incarceration in the U.S.
Alexander began by laying
out the argument that systemic failures in the justice
system have resulted in mass incarceration that
disproportionately affects poor people of color. She warned
participants not to see the election of our nation's first
African American president as proof of a post-racial
society. Rather, she encouraged attendees to "awaken from
our collective slumber," and create not only a civil rights
movement, but a human rights movement, dedicated to
abolishing the system of mass incarceration.
"We've got to admit out loud that we as a nation
have managed to recreate a caste system, and we have to be
willing to tell this truth in our schools... in our
churches... in our neighborhoods... in prison and outside of
prison. We have to be willing to tell these truths so that a
great awakening can occur," Alexander said.
In the
rousing conclusion to her talk, she added, "I hope that we
will keep in mind that all of these rules, policies, laws
and practices rest upon one core belief, and it is the same
core belief that sustained Jim Crow. It is the belief that
some of us are not worthy of genuine care and concern, and
if we effectively challenge that belief, this whole system
begins to fall." This belief is racism.
Alexander's
words spurred conversation throughout the crowd, building
enthusiasm going into the conference, which reconvenes today
for a day focused on remembrance and healing. Speirn, as
well as Asheville Mayor Terry Bellamy and Joe Stewart, a
member of the WKKF board of trustees, had welcomed attendees
to the conference. The speakers emphasized that while
disparities still exist in American society, racial healing
is helping diverse neighbors bridge their differences and
work together to strengthen their community.
More
than 500 national and community-level leaders,
community-based organization and civil rights groups
gathered at the conference for a collaborative process aimed
at healing the wounds of racism and addressing conscious and
unconscious bias. Entitled "Reclaiming the Narrative," the
convening will engage participants in conversations on
eliminating barriers to opportunities, especially for
vulnerable children. Stewart energized the audience with his
welcome address.
"We believe, as all of you
believe...We dream, as all of you dream...that America can
heal, and America will heal, and that America must heal and
we together share a commitment to the healing process,"
Stewart said.
"Our message this evening is as it
was with our founder, that we are deeply committed to the
health, happiness and well-being of children, and even more,
we are particularly committed to the plight of our most
vulnerable children," said Stewart, adding that the
conference participants are united in seeking a society "in
which all children thrive, a society where equal opportunity
is no longer a hollow promise but a living reality."
Earlier in the evening, Mayor Bellamy and Patty
Grant, of the Cherokee Preservation Council, talked about
the healing process and what can be achieved by working
together.
Mayor Bellamy said her city had experienced a
high dropout rate among high school students, especially
African American youths. Working with the community, she
established an internship program for youths leading to a
more than 30 percent reduction in the city's dropout rate.
Grant, of the Cherokee Preservation Council,
recited the long history of racism that the Cherokee nation
has suffered through the centuries. "These difficult
experiences have made each one of us stronger" said Grant,
"to achieve our goal of helping America heal, to gain
strength and prosperity through racial equality we must have
a unified vision and effort and maintain this commitment to
sticking with this vision until it is achieved."
Gail Christopher, WKKF vice president-program strategy,
said that there is an urgency to presenting the complete
narrative on race, particularly in telling the positive
stories of people working together.
"As we continue to
hear stories about inequity, especially among people of
color and the myth that we are a post-racial society,
there's an urgency to address the overarching narratives
that misinform our collective understanding," she said.
"This convening brings together hundreds of individuals
dedicated to making life better for vulnerable children.
Together, we hope to ensure that future generations of
Americans can grow up in a thriving and inclusive democracy
we must put these issues of inequity in front of us now so
that we can move beyond them
together."
***
This conference is
part of the foundation's America Healinginitiative,
which provides grants for organizations to address
structural bias and facilitate racial healing in
communities.
The conference is taking place at
the Grove Park Inn, 290 Macon Avenue, Asheville, NC
28804.
For more information about America Healing,
visit www.AmericaHealing.org.
W.K.
Kellogg Foundation
The W.K. Kellogg
Foundation (WKKF), founded in 1930 as an independent,
private foundation by breakfast cereal pioneer, Will Keith
Kellogg, is among the largest philanthropic foundations in
the United States. Guided by the belief that all children
should have an equal opportunity to thrive, WKKF works with
communities to create the conditions where vulnerable
children can realize their full potential in school, work
and life.
The Kellogg Foundation is based in
Battle Creek, Mich., and works throughout the United States
and internationally, as well as with sovereign tribes.
Special emphasis is paid to priority places where there are
high concentrations of poverty and where children face
significant barriers to success. WKKF priority places in the
U.S. are in Michigan, Mississippi, New Mexico and New
Orleans; and internationally, are in Mexico and Haiti. For
more information, visit www.wkkf.org.
ENDS