Category: Events
Summer School of Women’s Activism 2015
From our comrades at AF3IRM –
NEW YORK–SSOWA’s final session on August 1st features the study and discussion of commonality and differences in women’s struggles in five cultural contexts.
With a panel featuring human rights lawyer and activist Suzanne Adely of Al-Awda New York, Palestine Right to Return Coalition and Arab-American Movement of Women Rising for Justice; clinical psychologist Dr. Mayowa Obasaju of Black Women’s Blueprint, Radical Social Work Group and Standing In Our Power; transmedia storyteller Thenmozhi Soundarajan of the Dalit Nation; psychologist Michelle Cervantes of the Educational Assistance and Resources for the Latin-American Youth; and a video presentation from Eastern Band Cherokee descent Roslyn Dotson of the Tapwe Production, this session affirms AF3IRM’s commitment to transnational feminism.
AF3IRM NYC Chapter Coordinator Olivia Canlas, law graduate working with Foreclosure Prevention and with the weekly radio hour Asia Pacific Forum, will facilitate the session. The intent is to establish commonality in difference, to recognize the specificity of how colonialism and imperialism have impacted women in different cultures and yet understand the common trend of struggle for liberation that underlies women’s histories in varying cultural contests.
For four Saturdays, starting on July 11 until August 1st, the Summer School of Women’s Activism will be holding sessions on the history, theory and practice of the women’s liberation struggle. Registration is still being accepted at www.ssowa2015.eventbrite.com and fees remain at the standard $40 for professionals, $35 for students and unemployed; $80 for institutional representatives and scholarships for those who’re truly down and out but enthusiastic. All fees include reading materials and a light lunch for four Saturdays of SSOWA 2015.
Preceding this session, participants will tackle the issue of Militarism and the Assault on Democratic Processes with War Resisters League National Organizer Tara Tabassi and AF3IRM NYC members Joan Ariete and Leani Auxilio who have first-hand knowledge of militarization. The July 25th class will look at how militarism runs through relations between the US and other countries but also between the US government and transnational communities within its borders. It will discuss the militarization of the policing of communities and local application of the so-called “war on terror” and the gun lobby. Most significantly, the class will look at the impact on women, particularly transnational women, of this odious policy.
The July 18th class on Imperialism, Globalization and the Re-feudalization of Women will be led by Patricia Ramirez and Nicole Salcedo. Ms. Ramirez holds a BA in Political Science from Hunter College and has worked for the Peruvian government in New York City. Ms. Salcedo has grown up virtually in activism and women’s organizing in the Philippines. The class will look into the re-definition of “work” or “jobs” for women under the intensifying class/race/gender division of humanity caused by imperialist globalization. The class will look into the bifurcation of “traditional” slavery into labor and sex trafficking, and its separation from labor export and legalized prostitution which institutionalize historic women’s oppression.
The SSOWA opens on July 11th with three activist-writers – Ninotchka Rosca, Justine Calma and Veronica Agard — leading a comprehensive study of interlocking systems of oppressions against women which have made possible the continuing “vanish-ment” of women’s issues from public discourse. The class will look into class, gender and race and how the concept of intersectionality functions in the tri-helix of women’s oppression.
Ninotchka Rosca is a multi-awarded writer and activist, a survivor of human rights violations under a dictatorship, and a pioneer of major advocacy concerns for women. She brought the slogan “women’s rights are human rights” to the US in 1987 and has constantly engaged in creating space for the voices and presence of women of color in the global women’s movement. Justine Calma holds degrees from Columbia University and UC Irvine and worked with Filipino-American and South Asian youth in California for seven years. Veronica Agard is co-founder of the Sister Circle Collective and holds a degree in international studies and history from the City College of New York. She did her research for her undergraduate thesis at the Centro de Investigaciones Regionales de Mesoamerica, in La Antigua, Guatemala. She writes for The Grio, Let Your Voice be Heard, Mic and For Harriet.
Integrated into each class is an hour of practical skills training on how to recognize, document and respond to daily sexism. A special workshop on pod casting will be conducted by Charlene Sayo of Ms. Represent. Ms. Sayo is a Montreal-born, Vancouver-based blogger, commentator and activist. She is the co-author of Canada: The New Frontier for Filipino Mail-Order Brides. She sits on the editorial committee of the Vancouver-based magazine, The Mainlander and blogs at The Huffington Post, and Open Salon. Her work has appeared in Accent Magazine, the Manila Times, the Globe & Mail, the Feminist Current, the Philippine Chronicle, BlackHeart Magazine, and Dessert for Breakfast, and in 2012, she was featured in the award-winning documentary Status Quo: The Unfinished Business of Feminism.
Scholarships are available for volunteers and the down and out. The SSOWA compresses almost four years of gender studies into four Saturday four-hour sessions, starting at noon with a light lunch and ending at 4 pm. Transnational women and the woman-identified are welcome. SSOWA administrators are also open to helping those in other locations create such a pop-up school. For more information, please contact nynj@af3irm.org.
Freestyle – June Circle
We’re back!!!!
Join us on for the first circle of the summer to kick back, get to know one another and develop a collective vision for the summer. Is there a project you’re working on that you want to collaborate on? Do you want to reconnect and find ways to plug in to our work?
We will also be announcing our summer event schedule and sharing BIG news!
In true summer picnic fashion, please bring food and snacks to share with the group. *Please list ingredients for folks with allergies
When: Saturday, June 27th starting at 12pm
Where: Central Park – Great Lawn
Rain date: Sunday June 28 (same time, same place)
RSVP: sisterscirclecollective@gmail.com
#SayHerName
Community–
We are honored to be sponsoring this incredibly important event taking place tomorrow evening at Union Square (southside), alongside our friends and comrades of AF3IRM NYC, Yeah That’s What She Said, Black Lives Matter NYC, the Sadie Nash Leadership Project and many more.
We hope to see you then.
In solidarity,
the SCC
#SAYHERNAME – A Vigil in Remembrance of Black Women and Girls Killed by the Police
Background: Although Black women are killed, raped and beaten by the police, their experiences are rarely foregrounded in our popular understanding of racialized state violence.
Join us in remembering Black women and girls who have been victimized by the police, but whose experiences are all too often relegated to the margins.
If the loss of their lives matters;
If the grief of their families matters;
If the impunity with which all Black lives can be taken matters;
Then we cannot allow these tragedies to remain unmarked, silenced and forgotten.
This vigil is being held the evening prior to May 21st, a national day of action to end state violence against Black women called by BYP100.
Sponsoring Organizations:
African American Policy Forum
BYP100
Black Lives Matter NYC
Justice League NYC
The Stop Mass Incarceration Network
Stop Patriarchy
One Billion Rising
The Civil Rights Coalition on Police Reform
BK Nation
Judson Memorial Church
The Precedential Group
The Chicago Alliance Against Racist & Political Repression
CONNECT
Donkeysaddle Projects
Brooklyn NAACP
AF3IRM
Yeah, That’s What She Said
Black Trans* Women’s Lives Matter
The Civil Rights Coalition on Police Reform
Empowering Women of Color at Columbia Law School
Sister Circle Collective
the Revolutionary Communist Party
Sadie Nash Leadership Project
City College Day of Action – April 15th at 3pm
Please come through to this important action at City College!
Gender Resource Center Campaign
CITY COLLEGE DAY OF ACTION
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 15th at 3pm
138th STREET & CONVENT AVE
Join us in front of the administration building at City College for our day of action in solidarity with protests internationally for low wage workers. Students and youth all over New York City are rising up to show that we are united, powerful, and ready to fight economic injustice.
The students believe that the minimum wage should be increased to $15 an hour, and that workers should have the right to unionize without retribution. Students are disproportionately affected by wealth inequality and a lack of social mobility. CUNY students are told that public college is an affordable option, yet many are still dropping out due to tuition hikes, cuts to social assistance programs like TAP and PELL and increasing student loan interest rates. Programs like childcare,emergency scholarships, and counseling services, which were once accessible, are…
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Town Hall with the Gender Resource Center Campaign
On behalf of the Gender Resource Center Campaign, we’re pleased to invite you to:
Gender Resource Center – Town Hall
Thursday, April 2nd beginning at 6pm in Shepard Hall 350
An important dialogue with student leaders and community health leaders on the need for services and healing spaces to combat gender-based violence on campus.
Confirmed speakers:
– Stephanie Petit Homme, City College Alumni and past coordinator of 16 Days of Activism Against Gender Violence at City
– Chanel L. Porchia-Albert, CD, CPD, CLC, CHHC, Founder/Executive Director of Ancient Song Doula Services
– Adjoa Sankofia Tetteh, MA, CHES, CLC, Sexuality & Breastfeeding Educator
Moderators:
– Kira Rakova of the Student Mental Health Initiative
– Priya Shajan of Students for Educational Rights
If you want to know more about the GRC Campaign and why it’s so important to the Sister Circle Collective, swing by!
See you then!
Colors of Healing
We wanted to be sure to invite you all to an upcoming event this Friday night. We’ll be vending at Colors of Healing to help get The Ya-Ya Network and War Resisters League to the INCITE Conference next month!
We will have jewelry by our Core Sister Yexenia for sale, in addition to buttons, patches and pins for sale to benefit the legal campaign of the Guillermo Morales/Assata Shakur Student and Community Center of City College. We invite you all to come by and support this amazing event. There’s a dance party afterwards as well!



