Guias

The National Day of Racial Healing 2022








Get involved at:

Join us for the premiere of the 6th annual National Day of Racial Healing

Observed annually, the National Day of Racial Healing is dedicated to exploring the ongoing work of #HowWeHeal from the effects of individual and systemic racism. Launched on Jan. 17, 2017, it is an opportunity to bring all people together in our common humanity and inspire collective action to create a more just and equitable world.

This annual day was created by and is co-hosted by the W.K. Kellogg Foundation (WKKF) and Truth, Racial Healing & Transformation (TRHT) community partners. It is held every year on the Tuesday following Martin Luther King, Jr. Day.

#HowWeHeal

Featuring: Soledad O’Brien, John Legend, Heather McGhee, Julissa Calderon, Rochelle Riley, Connie Brownotter, Reyes, Kent Wong, Linda Sarsour, Dr. Denese Shervington, Dr. David Williams, Rachel Godsil, Quyên Ðinh, La June Montgomery Tabron, the Ndlovu Youth Choir, Supaman, and art by Favianna Rodriguez

PROGRAM CHAPTERS:

00:00 – Opening Performance: “Liberate Love” — Ndlovu Youth Choir
03:57 – Welcome: Soledad O’Brien
07:38 – Land Acknowledgement: Supaman
11:43 – Opening Dialogue: La June Montgomery Tabron and Connie Brownotter

RACIAL HEALING AND SOLIDARITY
19:23 – Blessing: Dr. Diane Paloma
21:23 – Conversation | Healing and Solidarity: Julissa Calderon, Kent Wong, Linda Sarsour, Dr. Denese Shervington
34:49 – Video Spotlight | Flint Michigan: Truth, Racial Healing & Transformation

RACIAL EQUITY: THE PATH FORWARD
40:51 – Performance: John Legend and Reyes
44:48 – Conversation | Racial Equity — The Path Forward: Rochelle Riley, Dr. David R. Williams, Rachel Godsil, Quyen Dinh

COMMITMENT TO ACTION
58:08 – Call to Action: Soledad O’Brien
01:01:10 – Call to Commitment: La June Montgomery Tabron and Heather McGhee
01:11:44 – Closing Performance: “Why”— Supaman

——————————————————————-

The National Day of Racial Healing 2022

Link do Vídeo






25 Comentários

  1. As a point of protocol, it would have been polite to give space to Connie Brownotter to introduce herself and her people in a formal way.

  2. This was my first time watching the National Day of Healing. This was awesome and educational at hand to watch, and I have learned so much. The speakers were phenomenal. I look forward to reading more about how I can get involved in this movement.

  3. Working TOGETHER Works… All true allies are greatly appreciated ✊🏿✊🏻✊🏼✊ Respect!!! 💯❤️🎯🎉🎊

  4. I absolutely love Dr. David Williams! Thank you for highlighting him in this work, for decades he has been such a champions for equity in the public heath space! Definitely and all-star and so much to learn from him and his work! Great work!

  5. There are people that count on your prespective. I my self see racism would not stop is just the same or as I see it is getting worse every day . New generation are lazy and money hungry , lazy 😪 is sad . 😥

  6. I really wanted to be an ally for minorities in America, but after seeing so much overt anti-white racism in social media and mainstream media that never gets denounced or checked by any of the people that are supposedly against racism, I just can't do it. If you won't support/defend me, I ain't supporting you.

  7. I really enjoyed this being a Filipino American teen who strives to grow as a human being! Thanks for putting this together and helping us become the best version of ourselves.

  8. REPARATIONS ANYONE: In my now aged opinion, I think nothing short of Economic Reparations is in order toward healing and I'd be over the moon if it happened before our oldest civil rights leaders died. To be fair, I have no idea what I would do with a billion dollars. I do know however, that most of us could use full health care coverage, (yes, eyes and teeth), money for a home and transportation. I'm flexible in terms of arrangements. I'd take one big settlement (2.5 million) or enjoy access to a trust that issues scheduled untaxed, payments over a few years (4-5). I'd also want to hear an official apology read from the Oval Office. I don't care if the president reads it or a press secretary, as long as it represents a document from the United States of America.

  9. How come black people never admit that black people commit racially motivated crimes against white people. Much more than whites? This country needs to change this gaslighting belief that black people are victims.

  10. There are five federally recognized tribes located in the state of Idaho: the Shoshone-Bannock, the Shoshone-Paiute, the Coeur d'Alene, the Kootenai, and the Nez Perce. Their land is beautiful!

  11. "Our nation was born in genocide…We are perhaps the only nation which tried as a matter of national policy to wipe out its Indigenous population. Moreover, we elevated that tragic experience into a noble crusade. Indeed, even today we have not permitted ourselves to reject or feel remorse for this shameful episode." (Martin Luther King Jr.) As a Dine' (Navajo) elder, my hope is to be that ripple, faithfully live a spirit of servitude & pray for peace for all human beings🙏❤🤗

Comentários estão fechados.