#FeministsOnTheMove – Press Release

image Media contact:   Veronica Agard – veronica.agard@gmail.com AF3IRM & SISTER CIRCLE COLLECTIVE CALL FOR A STRONG WOMEN’S PRESENCE, WOMEN’S VOICE AT THE MILLION PEOPLE’S MARCH NEW YORK:   From 92-year-old Pearlie Golden, killed in Atlanta, to seven-year-old Aiyana Stanley-Jones, killed in Detroit, Michigan, police violence has impacted and continues to impact the lives of  black women and girls, as well as queer, trans and gender-nonconforming people.   It is time, says AF3IRM NYC and the Sister Circle Collective, to pay attention. Under the hashtag #feministsonthemove, the two organizations are inviting women, queer, trans, and genderqueer folk, as well as allies, to help create a strong woman’s contingent for the 13th December Million People March against police brutality.  Participants are asked to gather at Washington Square North/5th Avenue at 1 pm. We are asking anyone who would like to join to wear purple as a sign of unity in this struggle. “The message is simple:  state violence directly affects black women and girls, queer, trans and gender nonconforming people. The violence against black women and girls, queer, trans and gender nonconforming people, has been persistent and ranges from physical mauling to sexual assault.  It is time to acknowledge this and add it to our understanding of state violence and police brutality,”   said Olivia Canlas of AF3IRM NYC. “We cannot change what we do not name.   The violence against black women and girls, including queer, trans, and gender nonconforming people, has been with us for as long as such violence was inflicted upon black men.  It is as significant an aspect of state violence and police brutality,” said  Lanai Daniels of Sister Circle  Collective. Police brutality against black women, girls , queer, trans and gender nonconforming people occurs in practically all states of the United States.  Yvette Smith, 47, was killed in Texas;  Nizah Morris, 47, was killed in Philadelphia; Miriam Carey, 34, was killed in Washington, DC;  Rekia Boyd, 22, was killed in Chicago;  Kayla Moore, 42, was killed in Berkeley, California; Tarika Wilson, 26, was killed in Ohio;  Alberta Spruill, 57, was killed in New York as was Shereese Frances, 30.  We seek to call their names on the streets and the names of many others who have been murdered by law enforcement. The intent in calling attention to the constant police violence against black women, queer, trans, and gender nonconforming people is to be inclusive, not divisive. It is to acknowledge the black women leadership of this movement, the anti-black racism prevalent in many communities of color and to show solidarity across racial and ethnic lines and the intersections we hold as women, girls, queer, trans and gender nonconforming people. Importantly, it is to recognize that minority communities, especially the Black community, is systematically  targeted as a whole, but that there are special actions directed against black women and girls, queer, trans, and gender nonconforming people in particular. One such case involved Daniel Ken Holtzclaw, an Oklahoma police officer, who has been charged with sexually assaulting seven African-American women.  He is also accused of burglary and felonious stalking.  He is currently out on bail. “When we say #blacklivesmatter, that includes black women’s lives, black girls’ lives and the lives of black queer, trans, and gender nonconforming people.  State violence, as manifested by police brutality, is not piecemeal,” said Veronica Agard  of Sister Circle Collective. The women’s contingent is both an expression of active participation in the opposition to the murder of black men and a statement of protest against state violence inflicted upon black women, girls, queer, trans, and gender nonconforming people.   —  # #blacklivesmatter #blackwomenslivesmatter #feministsonthemove #holditdown #assatataughtme #angelataughtme www.af3irm.org; nynj@af3irm.org https://www.facebook.com/AF3IRMNYC http://www.sistercirclelcollective.org ; sisterscirclecollective@gmail.com http://www.facebook.com/SisterCircleCollective

Patriarchy in Activist Spaces II

ONE YEAR LATER – the conversation continues:

Patriarchy in Activist Spaces II
As we continue to grow from moments to movements: anti-imperial, anti-capitalist movements do not necessarily mean the politics of the participants are anti-sexist and anti-racist. How do we comfort each other and check each other in a community of activists united to bring down structures of capitalism, imperialism and colonization? How do we as women educate each other and support movements that may hinder our energy and collective power if there are perpetrators of the same oppression organizing together?

Join us as we facilitate a circle discussion where we address these questions and more!

***Allies are welcomed, but we encourage women of color, queer people, gender non-conforming people, and trans* people to join us!!!***

WHEN: Saturday, December 6th from 2-5pm
WHERE: The Ya-Ya Network
224 West 29th Street, 14th Floor
New York, NY 10001

A part of #16Days of Activism Against Gender Violence at CCNY
Support the Gender Resource Center Campaign
Defend and Restore the Guillermo Morales/Assata Shakur Community and Student Center

What I Mean By Self Sufficient

What I Mean By Self Sufficient

by Dairanys Grullon Virgil 

Due to a series of events in my life I wake up a morning crying. YES! Crying. This is not the first time that I wake up like this, but this is the first time I decide to publicly share my thoughts because I’m pretty sure that as I feel others self identify women felt this before.

One of the words that got stock to me while I was crying was SELF Sufficient. I look it up in the internet and this is the definition: Emotionally and intellectually independent. In my personal opinion someone with these qualities is something positive and admirable. It is not an easy thing or almost impossible to not constantly depend on others people emotional support.

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