Can you stop racism




















You cannot fight against one form of injustice and not fight against others. Many survivors of domestic violence also face racism and other forms of oppression. We have a Racial Justice Pinterest Board discussing racial justice themes that impact survivors. Join our online book club , Reader with a Cause! We engage in conversations about popular books and themes including racial justice, domestic violence, and sexual assault. Learn more technology safety tips. There is always a computer trail, but you can leave this site quickly.

Here are eight ways that you can fight racism in your community: 1. Learn to recognize and understand your own privilege. Examine your own biases and consider where they may have originated. Validate the experiences and feelings of people of color. This service is free and confidential. The support service can be accessed through the Beyond Blue coronavirus page. For personal crisis and mental health support services you can contact Beyond Blue on or Lifeline on 13 11 14 at any time.

Kids Helpline is a free service for young people aged 5 to Kids, teens and young adults can call at any time. Racism is not acceptable. If you are the victim of racist behaviour If you are assaulted or threatened with violence, contact the police.

Join us in fighting racism! In , the international community adopted a convention by which they committed to eliminate all forms of racial discrimination. The Convention is now nearing universal ratification. Yet still, all around the world too many suffer from the injustice and stigma that racism brings. No country can claim to be free of racism, racism is a global concern, and tackling it requires a universal effort. See how anti-discrimination helps support the Agenda for Sustainable Development.

Test your knowledge. Check your bias. Get inspired by their work. For a lot of white people, just suggesting that being white has meaning will trigger a deep, defensive response.

And that defensiveness serves to maintain both our comfort and our positions in a racially inequitable society from which we benefit. Reckoning with shame, blame, guilt, and anger takes courage and vulnerability. Vulnerability takes courage; it takes learning how to be brave and afraid at the exact same time. Courage allows us to be an everyday hero and to inspire collective heroism. To be anti-racist, you have to sit with the discomfort and put courage, compassion, and vulnerability over comfort.

Cultivating an anti-racist mindfulness practice is essential to doing and sustaining this work. Challenge participants say The AntiRacist Table Mindfulness Practices incorporated in the Challenge provided a space for them to face hard emotions and to find compassion.

Just as denial is the heart of racism, so seeing humanity in others is at the heart of anti-racism. Martin Luther King Jr. To be anti-racist, one must actively work to create anti-racist policies. One must engage the world seeing all racial groups as equals and intentionally promote equity. Anti-racists support policies that reduce racial inequity, such as:.

One must hold all groups of people—a color, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, religion, ability, age, and any combination of those—as equal.

To champion equality is to fight for equity. It is to understand that corrective action is needed to create equity. Cultivating empathy is key to rehumanizing the dehumanized. But empathy has another benefit to anti-racists: It helps to build the ability to bounce back from shame, a critical tool in this work.

Empathy increases shame resilience because it moves us toward connection, compassion, and courage—the opposite of the fear, blame, and disconnection that result from shame. Staying stuck in shame means one is not working to be anti-racist. To be an ally is to take on this struggle as if it is your own.



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