Fieldnotes on Fortitude: Resilience in Resistance
About the new book by Our Human Family, the themes, who wrote for it, and why it’s the book for times such as these that you didn’t know you needed.
About the new book by Our Human Family, the themes, who wrote for it, and why it’s the book for times such as these that you didn’t know you needed.
Our latest anthology is an insightful and moving collection of essays that cuts through the chaos and cruelty to show us how to breathe again and nurture the inextricable links between our individual resilience and communal resistance. And it’s coming soon! You didn’t really think we forgot about...
Oppression and White Supremacy in America
It takes more than simply hiring someone to address issues within an organization. It takes a top-down commitment to be part of that change.
What do you do when they cross the line?
OHF WEEKLY, Vol. 5 No. 34: Editor’s letter on allyship, racial equity, racism, and inclusion; plus a quote by Iyanla Vanzant.
OHF WEEKLY, Vol. 5 No. 33: Editor’s Letter, “Remember When You Couldn’t Call Out a Racist? I Do.”, and a quote by Oprah Winfrey.
If the disease “is greed and the struggle for power,” then it is greed and the struggle for power anywhere that we must fight.
With the death of Carolyn Bryant, the last living of Emmett Till’s killers, can America surrender even a little of her rage in the absence of Till’s due justice?
If Black people can develop and refine metaphors to understand the white experience (in all of its constituent complexity, pain and privilege), how is it that white people are excused from understanding the Black experience?
Our Human Family’s new book “Fieldnotes on Allyship: Achieving Equality Together” is an informal and informative guide to becoming an effective ally.
If white racists define victory as remaining socioeconomically dominant in the foreseeable future, then they’ve already lost the war. They just don’t know it yet
As a white man, my inquiry into Blackness has helped me to connect with Black people on a much deeper level.
White supremacy dissolves culpability, and allows a veneer of “niceness” to mask horrific behavior
if you still don’t understand what Black people are going through in these United States, there’s only one reason: you don’t want to.
The Ocoee Massacre is still considered the bloodiest day in modern American political history.
It's not so much that I, as a Black man, am chomping at the bit to talk about racism . . . but if asked about it, I will.