“What struck me most about those who rioted was how long they waited. The restraint they showed. Not the spontaneity, the restraint. They waited and waited for justice and it didn’t come. No one talks about that…” Toni Morrison
And we have. We have waited and waited and waited and the question today, as people from all walks of life take to the streets across the nation: How much longer must we wait for our country to honor the unalienable Rights endowed by the Creator to “Life, Liberty and the Pursuit of Happiness ?” How many more deaths? How many more protests?- Use your social media and online platforms to underscore your support of justice for the African American community and cultural institutions now and moving forward;
- Advocate to your funders and elected officials your stand for equitable funding for institutions of color;
- Create a radically welcoming space for not just select Black artists and works, but for all Black audiences beyond MLK Weekend and African American Heritage Month;
- Visit our communities and institutions. Invest in our small businesses. Attend our events; and,
- Be the person who doesn’t look like the majority of people in a space and experience the power of that perspective.
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Develop, communicate, and achieve a multi-prong, multi-year racial justice strategic plan with actionable benchmarks that support racial justice and equity.
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Create an Institutional Racial Justice Task Force made up of various departments from throughout the organization with diverse representation that will hold the institution accountable to their strategic plan.
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Present an annual racial justice audit, just like one might do for its financials, and make it available to the public.
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Funders can require a racial justice annual audit as part of their application process to assess grant applicants.
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Recruit Board Members that have the expertise, knowledge-base, and commitment to support racial justice strategies.
Dr. Indira Etwaroo
Executive Artistic Director, The Billie Holiday Theatre