In Minnesota, Black Activists Are Being Paid To Rest
04/11/2023
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From Pioneer Press in Minnesota:

St. Paul activist Melvin Giles one of seven to receive $55,000 grant for rest and recuperation

By JARED KAUFMAN | [email protected] | Pioneer Press
PUBLISHED: April 9, 2023 at 7:46 a.m.

With $55,000, Melvin Giles can buy a lot of fuel—er, bubbles.

Giles, a lifelong Rondo community activist and urban gardener in St. Paul, is known for blowing bubbles as a central part of his peace advocacy. In addition to co-leading the Urban Farm and Garden Alliance and spreading joy with bubbles, Giles also installs peace poles, simple monuments with the inscription ‘May peace prevail on Earth’ in several languages.

And as a “Star Trek” fan, he considers himself a time traveler—looking backward in time to draw lessons from the past, and looking generations into the future at a better world.

His ethos, simply put: “The peace poles are my time traveling vehicles, and the bubbles are the fuel,” he said.

He’s also one of seven inductees in the new Black Legacy and Leadership Enrichment Initiative, a pilot program that awards unrestricted grants of $55,000 to local activists so they can rest, recharge and ultimately better serve the community.

The other inductees include DejaJoelle, an artist who uses dance and spirituality to promote healing; Farji Shaheer, a violence-intervention specialist who specifically works to guide survivors away from retaliation; Anura Si-Asar, the founder of a publishing company and K-12 education program aimed at African cultural heritage; Corenia Smith, a community organizer and policy advocate for reproductive justice and violence prevention; Princess Titus, who guides people of all ages toward healthier eating patterns and trauma responses; and Antonio Williams, a voting-rights advocate and formerly incarcerated community mentor.

The grant initiative is a collaboration between the Minneapolis-based Cultural Wellness Center and the Pohlad Family Foundation, which over the past several years has crystallized a focus on racial justice and housing stability.

Carl Pohlad was a local financier and owner of the Minnesota Twins who was worth $3.6 billion at his death in 2009.

The grants are an investment not in activists’ work but in themselves as people to support their personal well-being, said community elder Atum Azzahir, the center’s executive director. And before they can rest, they have to figure out how to rest.

“The whole process is: Study yourself as you try to rest,” Azzahir said. “These are very busy, very active, very intensely committed people, and we know, for them, to rest is going to be a study.”

So over the next year, grantees will work through the Cultural Wellness Center’s flagship self-study curriculum, which views rest as more than just taking a break from external forces that wear a person down. True recuperation, Azzahir said, means engaging in deep internal reflection so a person can emerge strengthened and feeling whole.

From this perspective, getting a massage or taking a trip, for example, are meaningfully effective only when they’re undergirded by this active introspection process. The point of the legacy grants is to give community activists the resources to do both, Azzahir said — to allow themselves to realize that, yes, maybe a weeklong solo retreat would indeed be restorative, and then to depart for seven days without worrying about whether their family will have food on the table.

As Azzahir suspected, Giles said this mindset shift isn’t necessarily intuitive in our culture.

“It’s hard for people to get into that mode because we are so busy being on the treadmill that says do, do, do, do,” Giles said. “Like we are human do-ings, instead of human be-ings.”

Watching racism and neglect and disinvestment affect your grandparents, then your parents, then you — it can have a weathering-down effect on a person, Azzahir said. She grew up in Mississippi and, as an activist, has spent her career working to build back strength and rootedness in African-descendent communities.

“I remember Emmett Till’s murder,” she said. “I remember all of those things that are planted in our memory, as Black people. What the Cultural Wellness Center is about is healing our memory.”

Grantees in the initiative will ultimately be given a budget of $70,000: The no-strings-attached recuperation grant of $55,000, plus an additional $15,000 to support the community initiatives to which the activists might have otherwise devoted time and effort had they not been taking time for self-improvement.

Participants were selected by a 10-person screening committee; community elders helped devise the evaluation criteria, including questions on the clarity of applicants’ personal conceptions of rest and on the work that a year of rejuvenation might help them perform more strongly. Out of 162 written applications, 60 people were invited to attend in-person interviews and, ultimately, seven were chosen. The pilot program is scheduled to last for three years, for a total of 21 grantees.

As for Giles, he’s hoping that the recuperation enabled by the grant will allow him to time-travel into the future and focus on the “legacy” portion of the Black Legacy and Leadership Enrichment Initiative.

Considering how much damage black activists have done to Minneapolis over the last three years, paying them off to do nothing but nap for a year might be a brilliant strategy.

[Comment at Unz.com]

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