'Race' Helps History Colorado Start A Hard Conversation

By Carrie Saldo

why talk about race

One of many questions posed by the exhibit 'Race: Are We So Different?'

Carrie Saldo Arts District

 

Fuzzy Logic is a subset of quantum physics that dismisses binaries – black or white – and instead places a premium on the shades in between. Having devoted much of the past two decades to improving race relations that reasoning speaks to Harold Fields, host of the Second Tuesday Race Forum.

"There are social differences that become invisible and unknown to those who don't have to deal with it," Fields said.

Since 1997, the Second Tuesday Race Forum has been a place for people of all races to share their experiences and discuss the fuzzy logic that surrounds the concept of race. That experience will guide Fields as he moderates What Does the Science Say? for History Colorado, the first in a series of events tied to the museum's hosting of the nationally travelling exhibit RACE: Are We So Different?

 

"We are, as a species, much more similar than members of other species," Kathryn Hill, History Colorado Chief Operation Officer observed. "We come from a common ancestor."

The exhibit uses biological, cultural and historical evidence to explore race – one of the most divisive facets of American society – and presents facts often glossed over by revisionist history.

"I believe that [museums] are trusted gathering places for people to look at … the successful parts, but also the really difficult parts of human history," Hill said. "And to think about those stories, and to think about our stories relative to theirs and to imagine ways that we're going to, as individuals, and as communities, build a better world."

Questions posed within the exhibit encourage patrons to consider and share their beliefs on a number of race-related issues.

One interactive display plays a variety of male and female voices on a loop. It challenges patrons to match those voices to faces displayed screen.

A three-ringed binder with note cards rests on another display.

"If you want a Native American 'mascot' to represent your school, base the mascot on the real history of the tribe in your area," wrote one patron anonymously responding to the use of "Indians" as sports mascots.

As a white woman, Hill said she has the privilege of living her daily life differently than a person of color - without considering her race.

"How wealth has been accumulated, how people have been educated in this country, how we congregate socially, all of those things are profoundly rooted in race," Hill said.

It is her hope that the exhibit becomes an entry point for broader community discussion about race. That's why the museum is hosting several events, such as the discussion forum Harold Fields' is slated to moderate.

Taking stock of history, Fields said it could seem only small steps have been made toward a more equal America.

150 years after slavery and 60 years beyond the civil rights movement, race-related violence persists. One African-American and no women have been elected to the highest offices in the land.

Fields said he embraces those facts as a key to moving forward.

"We need to challenge ourselves to see those things, learning more about things hidden in plain sight," Fields said. "I like to take the word impossible – the letters right in front of you – change that to 'I'm possible.' It's the same letters but a whole other way of looking at it."

Arts District is a collaboration of KUNC, RMPBS, and KUVO.

Here is a link to the webpage for this Arts District radio Promotion. In includes an audio recording of the Arts Dirstrict promotion:

 http://www.kunc.org/post/race-helps-history-colorado-start-hard-conversation

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Noj2nGx2jNg&feature=youtu.be

 

We are moving the meeting this month to the third Tuesday, October 21st. The reason is a conflict with another event on the 14th.

On the second Tuesday, October 14th you are invited to attend the "FWD: Part One: What Does the Science Say?" event at the History Colorado Center.  Harold will be moderating the panel at this event. And you should know that there's a $4 or $5 charge for the event. Reservations are not required. Tickets can be purchased on-line, by calling 303-866-2394, or at the door.

You can see more information about this event at this link:

http://www.historycolorado.org/events/fwd-part-one-what-does-science-say-history-colorado-center 

Also, you can see an article "Why Talk About Race?" that talks about the exhibit in the Denver Urban Spectrum in the October issue. You can find it on news stands now, or at this link:

http://www.denverurbanspectrum.com/articles/11669

On the third Tuesday, October 21st,  we will be having our October meeting at  7 PM at the Park Hill United Methodist Church at Montview Blvd and Glencoe St. in Denver. Won't you please join us!

A Report on Ferguson & White Culture

In the second half of September Harold Fields attended a meeting of more than 50 activists, funders, and affinity groups about Ferguson, MO, and Other Structural Racism Flashpoints.  He will give us a high level report on the discussions and major themes coming from this group.  One of them is the rise in white anxiety that the group felt must be addressed.

In order to identify strategies for dealing with this anxiety we must explore the nature and characteristics of white culture as an ideology.  We will explore concepts in the areas of rugged individualism, competition, communication, history, orientation around progress, status and power, aesthetics, religion, and more.  So much of this is invisible to whites and can be hard to identify.  But we are going to jump right in!

For more detailed analysis take a look at Tema Okun’s work on White Supremacy Culture at this link:

http://www.cwsworkshop.org/PARC_site_B/dr-culture.html 

 

Please note the following schedule change for October.

• Our meeting in October will be the third Tuesday, October 21.

• On the second Tuesday, October 14, we would like you to come to the History Colorado Center for the first community conversation supporting the exhibit RACE: Are We So Different? Harold Fields will be moderating the panel that evening. That is why we are moving our meeting -- Harold can't do both!

More details will be posted very soon.

Please see http://historycoloradocenter.org/exhibits/race/

 

One year ago this month we were discussing the killing of Trayvon Martin. This year the headlines have been dominated by the shooting of Michael Brown and the protests in Ferguson, Missouri. When you consider the extra judicial killings of hundreds of other young people of color, it seems like we are looping again and again. A recent poll conducted by the Pew Research Center showed that blacks are about twice as likely to say that the shooting of Michael Brown “raises important issues about race that need to be discussed.”

Why does this gulf in attitude continue to persist? Is it growing or shrinking? What are the factors that contribute to such different perceptions of reality? What are some steps to help us get in the same page?

This month we will explore this persistence and look for strategies to change the cultural chasms coming from 400 years of history.

FILM

Dr. Angela Davis and Dr. Vincent Harding

 

Sunday, August 24 - 2:00 pm           Mercury Café, 2199 California St.

Spirit of Struggle -- Our Work for Liberation Continues

A videotape of a dialogue between these two celebrated civil rights activists. This event occurred in Denver to commemorate the Loretto Community's 200th year Jubilee.

Moderator: Brother Jeff

$5 suggested donation

Dr. Angela Davis: Scholar, political activist, educator. In the late 1960s Ronald Reagan, then Governor of California, tried to have her banned from teaching anywhere in the state of California. He failed. Recently Davis retired from the University of California at San Diego. Committed to the prison rights movement and calls for the abolition of the prison-industrial complex.

The late Dr. Vincent Harding: Historian, political activist, educator. Close ally of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Wrote the first draft of King's renowned speech opposing the Vietnam War at Riverside Church, New York City. Harding was the first Director of the Martin Luther King, Jr. Central for Social Change, and was the Founding Director of the Institute of the Black World, both based in Atlanta. Retired from the Iliff School of Theology, based at the University of Denver.

This event is sponsored by the Colorado Committee on Africa and the Caribbean, Critical Social Issues and the Service Learning Center at Regis University.

Contact: (303) 329-5881

Please visit our websites :. .. . .

www.tinyurl.com/coloradocommittee

www.tinyurl.com/criticalsocialissues