Sacred spaces A source for Black healing

[Music]

freshman year of undergrad

i remember attending the first football

game of the season look that’s me right

there about 17 rows down

37th to the left now if you look closely

you’ll see me dancing right because the

band had everybody on their feet and it

felt like one giant family reunion

i distinctly remember in that moment

pausing and thinking to myself just in

pure wonderment

i’ve never seen this many black people

together in one space

in my life i remember being a freshman

at auburn

walking around campus and feeling at a

place

between the massive brick buildings the

sea of students walking to class and the

big

lecture classrooms it was hard for me to

find students that looked like me

and talk like me coming from birmingham

alabama which is over 60

black being the only black person

in my class did not sit right with my

spirit

i needed i needed to find the black

people

and that’s when i saw the flyer and in

big bowl letters it read

black student union meetings mondays at

5 pm

in the student center that next monday

me and a couple of my girls

walked into that room of black students

from all walks of life

the joy the conversation and the

laughter that filled that room

it reminded me of home it reminded me of

freedom

what we created in that space it

extended beyond the stadium

and it went into the classrooms where my

professors felt more like my aunties and

uncles

it was on the set every friday where we

shared in community with music

art and food in the quad where the

eternal flame stood proudly

and in the lasting friendships that i

created friendships that have spanned

over a decade

my time in undergrad felt like it was

designed with me and mine

me specifically like tanisha i felt seen

and cared for it was the first time in

my life that i was in the majority

the first time where the identities the

histories and the experiences of people

who looked like me

were centered in every conversation i

still feel that same sense of wonder

when i think about that time in my life

and i know undoubtedly i would not be

this version of myself

without those experiences spaces like

black student union

saved me from slipping through the

cracks and helped me to believe in

myself

connected me to black faculty and staff

that treated me like i was their

daughter

and reminded me of who i could be and

provided me with friends who are

more like family that showed up at the

funeral when my dad passed away without

any questions asked

and have been at every single milestone

since

the black people at auburn made my

college experience

we created our own traditions made sure

we made it to graduation

and inspired each other to take up space

especially in places that told us we

didn’t belong

i felt unconditionally loved and

protected

i loved auburn knowing who i was and

knowing that being me

was simply enough i attended a pwi

a predominantly white institution yes at

times

it was isolating and lonely but i found

a space that created a sense of home

and safety for me connected me to my

forever family

and protected my sense of self and i

attended an hbcu

a historically black college university

a space created to be my cultural

sanctuary

a space that connected me to my identity

and my purpose

a space that protected my liberation

these experiences and spaces transformed

us

and are the reasons why we found

ourselves in the counseling psychology

doctoral

program studying to be psychologists it

is also the reason why when we got to

the university of georgia

we sought after spaces that reminded us

of our college experiences

luckily we found that space on the

sankofa research and outreach team

under the direction of dr colette

chapman hilyard

and the walls of her office we can let

down our armor and just be ourselves

talk about the microaggressions we just

experienced in the hallway

and hold each other accountable because

even though we do

have all this black girl magic we need

to save some for ourselves this team is

our sisterhood

our sacred space sacred spaces are

affirmative and protective

dedicated spaces with people who value

and share your identities

your history your language and your

experiences

they embrace you and give you the

permission to be vulnerable

to feel tension free and to be authentic

sacred spaces are on our college

campuses

they’re in our neighborhoods they’re at

our work now

you may be familiar with the term safe

spaces

we we want to be clear sacred spaces

are not safe spaces they are different

safe spaces tells us that we should feel

more comfortable in our identities in an

often intolerant world

here we are told that the safety and

visibility of oppressed groups

are promoted and that controversy should

be met with civility that’s what we’re

told

but if you’ve ever been the only black

woman in a room

and someone told you to calm down or you

found yourself feeling guarded

found yourself justifying your

experiences or whatever version of that

you might have experienced within your

own identities

you know the reality is that sometimes

these spaces don’t feel so safe

and that for black people specifically

safety can often feel like an illusion

that often times we find ourselves in

close proximity with neighbors who

disguise themselves as allies who do not

value our experiences and who perpetuate

violence against our communities because

of this it is absolutely necessary that

we distinguish safe spaces from sacred

spaces

so let’s talk about why sacred spaces

even matter

and as we are doing this you may find

yourself feeling uncomfortable

it may be a little uneasy just know

that all those feelings are part of the

change process

sacred spaces matter because all people

deserve to feel connected

and protected but history tells us

that black people have been disconnected

and unprotected

time and time again black families were

ripped away from their villages

forced on ships and enslaved to come to

a country that stripped them of their

language

their religion their culture their

humanity and even life

this was known as the maafa the black

holocaust

it matters because after 400 years of

cultural devastation

the terror against black people

continued for instance in 1919 a black

soldier by the name of william little

was traveling home to georgia after

surviving world war one

when he arrived he was met by a white

mob and that he wanted to strip him of

his uniform

of his dignity he refused and they

lynched him

and the black community was left once

again to grieve quietly in the shadows

william little like 4743 others

was lynched stripped of his liberty his

humanity

and his life disconnected and

unprotected

a more contemporary example that many of

you may be familiar with

the murder of george floyd the video

of the murder of george floyd has been

viewed over

1.4 billion times in counting

1.4 billion people watched a police

officer

kneel on the neck of george floyd for

eight minutes

and 46 seconds the heaviness

the brokenness and the collective grief

we

as black people experience knowing we

had to be around people that debated

george floyd’s humanity debated our

humanity

what william little’s and george floyd’s

stories have in common

is that they lay bare reality that so

many black people face

the reality that merely existing in our

skin can bring death

on any day at any moment that we are

unprotected

michael dawson is a black professor that

developed this notion called

linked fate meaning that black people

knew that their destinies

were tied to the destinies of other

black people so what we see

and we hear about the william littles

brianna taylors

tony mcdades and george floyds

we know that it could be us our fathers

our mothers

and our siblings what you’re feeling

right now

and what it means to us these are the

reasons sacred spaces are so important

these are realities that we cannot

escape repetitive narratives that tell

us time and time again we’re not

safe not safe to go to the store not

safe to go to school not safe to go to

church

not safe to live and it doesn’t go away

when we close that app on our phone

or when we turn the tv off or even when

we go to sleep at night

we run out of spaces in our inner and

outer worlds where we can just

be where we can heal so that begs the

question

where is it okay for us to talk and

process our experiences

our hurt we need a place where healing

can happen

a place where we can exhale where we can

where we can finally breathe

sacred spaces in the summer of 2019 i

created the healing circle along with

ecclesia savage

this space was a support group for black

women that tanisha and i now

co-facilitate

we knew there was a need for black women

to have a sacred space that

valued their healing centered their

lived experiences

and cultivated freedom i got a chance to

not be okay and it’d be okay the healing

circle

gave me the space to be vulnerable and

eventually the push to seek individual

counseling

without feeling guilty for needing help

i was quietly going through one of the

most difficult times in my life

i got reassurance that i am not alone i

made connections with women

that understood the language of hurt i

was speaking

i needed a space where i could be myself

and not worry

about cold switching or walking on

eggshells to ensure i didn’t fall into

perceived stereotypes

these are the voices of the women who

participated in the healing circle

the mental health implications of

experiencing violence and terrorism

on an everyday basis is detrimental to

our well-being

sacred spaces help us combat those

realities

sacred spaces for black folks are

freedom spaces

connected in open spaces space is for us

and by us so what does creating sacred

spaces even look like

for us it was being intentional we

wanted black women to know that this

space was designed

specifically for them to access the

power that already lies within them

and speak to the freedom that happens

when black people

come together it was a space that

honored the complexities of black

womanhood

while also making space for intimacy

vulnerability

joy and healing it was centering black

values principles and traditions to

promote healing

and recognizing the systemic nature of

racism in order to help each other

navigate all the spaces we occupy

outside of these sacred spaces these

spaces can be created organically or

even organized

these spaces are rare you either have to

seek them out or be invited in

they’re the group chats organizations

homecomings

family reunions kickbacks and the

cookouts

and because we benefited so much from

the spaces that nurtured our healing

we knew we had a responsibility to pay

it forward and we know many of you have

similar stories

and a similar appreciation you also have

the agency

wherever you are to create these spaces

create that group chat

create that organization create a space

within your network that is sacred

listen regardless of your experiences or

your identities

we all benefit from having a space where

we feel valued and loved

what we’re saying is this is

particularly important for black people

because of the historical and present

day violence because of the health

disparities

because of the school-to-prison

pipelines because of the wealth gap

because of all of the things that have

contributed to the 7 million black

people

experiencing mental illness in the past

year 7

million that’s more than the populations

of chicago

houston and philadelphia combined and

this is just not impacting the

generation of adults

it’s impacting the future generation of

change makers

as of 2018 suicide has become the second

leading cause of death for black

children ages 10 through 14.

remember the 1.4 billion views they were

watching that

and they are watching us too they’re

wondering what their futures hold

and are we protecting them and as we are

speaking

we know that you’re thinking as a social

justice warrior

as an ally as a human where do i step in

part of our fight to freedom and

dismantling systemic oppression and

racism

is protecting sacred spaces so that

black people can rest

and heal on our college campuses it

looks like hiring black faculty and

admitting black students by the numbers

and supporting black student-led

organizations students who didn’t have

someone to look to much like we did with

dr chapman hilyard

like many other pwis the university of

georgia’s black student and faculty

population is disproportionately low

with only 8.26 of all undergraduate

graduate and professional students

and only five percent of faculty being

black this also means investing in our

neighborhoods like supporting black

businesses

schools and ensuring that the people in

these neighborhoods have what they need

rather than push us out through

gentrification this also means

addressing racism and microaggressions

within the classroom

and in the workplace holding folks

accountable

ending police brutality and challenging

mandates laws and policies that continue

to perpetuate violence and terrorism

against black bodies your goal is to

protect these spaces

like the black kids sitting together in

the cafeteria

the neighborhoods the barber shops the

hbcus

black student unions the sankofas and

the healing circles

sacred spaces for black women black men

black queer folks black trans folks

black non-binary folks

black disabled folks black latinx folks

black immigrant folks

imagine a world without any sacred

spaces for them

isolating and lonely disconnected

and unprotected now imagine a world

where sacred spaces are created

and protected and that you you helped

make these spaces possible

sacred spaces create a sanctuary connect

us to our stories

and protect our freedom create connect

protect this is all of our jobs

all of our responsibilities we must

create

connect and protect sacred spaces

thank you

[Applause]

you

[音乐]

本科

一年级 我记得参加了本赛季的第一场足球

比赛 看那是我

就在左边第 37 排的 17 排 现在如果你仔细看

你会看到我在跳舞 因为

乐队的每个人都站起来了

感觉就像一个巨大的家庭团聚

我清楚地记得在那一刻

停下来思考自己,只是在

纯粹的惊奇中

我从来没有见过这么多黑人

在我生命中的一个空间里在一起我记得我是奥本大学的一名新生

校园里走来走去 感觉在

巨大的砖砌建筑之间的地方,

步行去上课的学生的海洋和

大型

演讲教室我很难

找到像

我一样说话像我来自

阿拉巴马州伯明翰的学生,那里有 60 多个

黑人是唯一的黑人

我班上的人与我的

精神

不合 工会会议 星期一下午

5 点

在学生中心举行 下星期一

我和我的几个女儿

走进那个

由各行各业的黑人学生组成的房间

充满欢乐的谈话和

充满房间的笑声

它让我想起了家 我的

自由

我们在那个空间中创造的东西

延伸到体育场之外

,它进入了教室,在那里我的

教授们感觉更像我的阿姨和

叔叔,

它每个星期五都在片场,我们

在社区中分享音乐

艺术和美食

永恒的火焰骄傲地矗立

在那里,在我建立的持久友谊中,

我建立了

跨越十年的友谊

我在本科的时候感觉就像它是

为我设计的,

特别是我的我,就像塔尼莎一样,我感到被看到

和关心这是第一次

我的生活,我第一次成为大多数人

的身份,

历史和与我相似的人的经历

在每一次谈话中都集中在我

仍然

当我想到我生命中的那段时间时,我会感到同样的惊奇

,我毫无疑问地知道,如果没有像黑人学生会这样的经历,我就不会成为

这个版本的自己

我是黑人教职员工

,他们对待我就像对待他们的

女儿一样

,提醒我我可以成为

什么

样的人,并为我提供了更像家人的朋友,他们

在我父亲去世时出现在葬礼上,没有

提出任何问题

,并且一直

自从

奥本的黑人创造了我的大学经历以来,在每一个里程碑上,

我们创造了自己的传统,确保

我们顺利毕业,

并相互启发,占据空间,

尤其是在那些告诉我们不属于我们的地方,

我感到无条件地被爱和

受保护的

我爱奥本知道我是谁并且

知道成为我

就足够了我参加了一个

以白人为主的机构是的

有时

它是 孤立和孤独,但我找到

了一个为我创造了家感和安全感的空间,

将我与我

永远的家人联系起来

,保护了我的自我意识,我

参加了 hbcu

一所历史悠久的黑人学院大学

一个被创建为我的文化

避难所

的空间 一个空间 将我与我的身份

和目标联系起来

一个保护我自由的空间

这些经历和空间改变了

我们

,也是我们发现

自己在咨询心理学

博士

课程中学习成为心理学家

的原因,这也是当我们

到达 佐治亚大学

我们寻找能让

我们想起大学经历的

空间 幸运的是,我们在 colette chapman hilyard 博士的指导下发现了

sankofa 研究和外展团队

空间

以及她办公室的墙壁,我们可以

放下盔甲,做我们自己

谈论我们刚刚

在走廊里经历的微攻击

并互相追究责任,因为

即使我们 o

拥有所有这些黑人女孩的魔法,我们需要

为自己节省一些这个团队是

我们的姐妹情谊

我们的神圣空间神圣空间是

肯定和保护性的

专用空间,与重视

和分享你的身份

你的历史你的语言和你的

经历的人

一起拥抱你并给予 您

允许

容易感到无压力并成为真正的

神圣空间在我们的大学

校园里

他们在我们的社区他们在

我们的工作现在

您可能熟悉

我们想要明确神圣的安全空间这个术语 空间

不是安全空间 它们是不同的

安全空间告诉我们,在一个经常不宽容的世界中,我们应该

对自己的身份感到更自在 在

这里,我们被告知,

受压迫群体的安全和知名度

得到提升,争议

应该以文明方式解决,这就是 有人告诉我们,

但如果你曾经是房间里唯一的黑人

女性

,有人告诉你冷静下来,或者你

发现自己感觉 守卫

发现自己证明了自己的

经历或在自己的身份中可能经历过的任何版本的合理性,

您知道现实是,有时

这些空间并不那么安全

,而且对于黑人来说,特别是

安全通常常常感觉像是一种

幻觉 我们发现自己

与邻居很接近,他们

伪装成盟友,他们不

重视我们的经历,并且

对我们的社区持续暴力

,因此,我们绝对有必要

将安全空间与神圣空间区分开来,

所以让我们谈谈为什么神圣空间

甚至重要

当我们这样做时,您可能会发现

自己感到不舒服,

这可能会有点不安,只要

知道所有这些感觉都是

变革过程的一部分,

神圣的空间很重要,因为所有人都

应该感到被联系

和保护,但历史告诉我们

,黑人有

黑人家庭一次又一次地被切断和不受保护

被从他们的村庄中掠走,

被迫登上船只并被奴役来到

一个剥夺他们

语言、

宗教、文化、

人性甚至生命的国家,

这被称为黑人

大屠杀,

这很重要,因为经过 400 年的

文化

破坏,恐怖

例如,1919 年,一

名名叫威廉·利特尔 (william little) 的黑人士兵在第一次世界大战中幸存下来后正在返回乔治亚州的家中,

当时他遇到了一群白人

暴徒,他想剥夺他的

制服

,让他失去尊严 他拒绝了,他们对

他处以私刑

,黑人社区再次被留

在阴影中静静地悲伤

威廉与 4743 一样,其他人

被处以私刑 剥夺了他的自由 他的

人性

和他的生活被切断和

不受保护

一个你们中许多人可能熟悉的更现代的例子

随着乔治·弗洛伊德被

谋杀,乔治·弗洛伊德被谋杀的视频

在 co 的浏览量已超过 14 亿次

14 亿人目睹一名警察

跪在乔治·弗洛伊德的脖子上长达

8

分 46 秒,我们作为黑人所经历的

沉重、破碎和集体悲痛

,因为我们知道我们

必须与那些争论

乔治弗洛伊德人性的人辩论我们的

人性

是什么 威廉·利特尔和乔治·弗洛伊德的

故事有一个共同点

,那就是他们暴露了一个现实,即如此

多的黑人面临这样

一个现实,即仅仅存在于我们的

皮肤中就可以

在任何一天、任何时候带来死亡,我们没有

受到保护。

迈克尔道森是一位黑人教授,

发展了 这个概念称为

关联命运,意思是黑人

知道他们

的命运与其他

黑人的命运息息相关,所以我们所看到

和听到的关于威廉·利特尔、

布赖安娜·泰勒、

托尼·麦克达德和乔治·弗洛伊德的故事,

我们知道这可能是我们的父亲,我们的父亲。

母亲

和我们的兄弟姐妹你们现在的感受

以及对我们的意义这些是

神圣的原因 步伐是如此重要,

这些都是现实,以至于我们无法

逃避重复的叙述,这些叙述

一次又一次地告诉我们我们

不安全去商店

不安全去学校不安全去

教堂

不安全生活和它

当我们关闭手机上的应用程序

或关闭电视时,甚至当

我们晚上睡觉时,

我们并没有消失,我们内在和外在世界的空间都用完了

我们可以在那里治愈,所以 这就引出了一个

问题,我们在哪里可以谈论和

处理我们的经历

我们的伤害 我们需要一个可以治愈

的地方 一个我们可以呼气的地方 在

那里我们终于可以在

2019 年夏天呼吸神圣的空间 我

创造了 与 ecclesia savage 一起的疗愈圈

这个空间是黑人女性的支持小组

,我和 tanisha 现在

共同促进

我们知道黑人女性

需要有一个神圣的空间,

重视她们的康复,以她们的

生活经历

和培养自由为中心 我得到了一个

不正常的机会,没关系,康复

给了我脆弱的空间,

最终推动寻求个人

咨询

而不会因为需要帮助而感到内疚

。 我的生活让

我得到了保证,我并不孤单

我与

了解我所说的伤害语言的女性建立了联系

这些是

参与治疗圈

的女性的声音 每天

经历暴力和恐怖主义

对心理健康的影响对

我们的幸福有害

神圣的空间帮助我们对抗这些

现实

黑人的神圣空间是

自由

在开放空间中连接的空间空间是为我们

和我们而创造的,所以创造神圣

空间

对我们来说看起来像什么它是故意的 我们

w 让黑人女性知道,这个

空间是专门为她们设计的,可以

让她们获得

已经存在的力量,

并讲述黑人聚集在一起时发生的自由,

这是一个

尊重黑人女性复杂性的空间,

同时也为她们腾出空间 亲密

脆弱

欢乐和治愈 它以黑人

价值观和传统为中心,以

促进治愈

并认识到种族主义的系统性本质,

以帮助彼此

驾驭我们

在这些神圣空间之外占据的所有空间 这些

空间可以有机地创造,

甚至可以组织

起来 空间是罕见的,你要么必须

找到他们,要么被邀请

他们是群聊组织

回家

家庭团聚回扣和

野餐

,因为我们从

培养我们康复的空间中受益匪浅,

我们知道我们有责任支付

它 向前,我们知道你们中的许多人都有

类似的故事

和类似的感激之情 o

无论您身在何处,都有代理机构 创建这些空间

创建该群聊

创建该组织

在您的网络中创建一个神圣的空间,

无论您的经历或身份如何,

我们都受益于拥有一个

我们感到被重视和喜爱的空间

“这是说这

对黑人来说尤其重要,

因为历史和现在

的暴力,因为健康

差异,

因为学校到监狱的

管道,因为贫富差距,

因为所有

促成了 7 过去一年有 100 万黑人

患有精神疾病

700

万,这比

芝加哥

休斯顿和费城的人口总和还要多,

这并没有影响

成年人这一代,

而是影响了 2018 年的未来一代

变革

者 自杀已成为第二

10 至 14 岁黑人儿童的死因。

记住他们的 14 亿浏览量

看着

那他们也在看着

我们 我们争取自由和

消除系统性压迫和

种族主义的斗争

是保护神圣的空间,以便

黑人可以

在我们的大学校园里

休息和康复

没有人像我们对

查普曼·希利亚德博士所做的

那样像许多其他 pwis

佐治亚大学的黑人学生和教职员工

人数不成比例地低

,所有本科

研究生和专业学生中只有 8.26 人

,只有 5% 的教职员工是

黑人 还意味着对我们的

社区进行投资,例如支持黑人

学院并确保这些社区的人们

ghborhoods 拥有他们需要的东西,

而不是通过高档化将我们赶出去

这也意味着

解决

课堂

和工作场所中的种族主义和微侵略,让人们

承担责任

结束警察的暴行并挑战

继续使暴力和恐怖主义持续存在

于黑人身上的法律和政策 你的目标 是为了

保护这些空间,

就像在自助餐厅里坐在一起的黑人孩子

社区 理发店

hbcus

黑人学生会 sankofas

和治疗圈

黑人女性的神圣空间 黑人男性

黑人酷儿 黑人跨性别者

黑人非二进制人

黑人残疾人 黑人 拉丁裔

黑人移民

想象一个没有任何神圣空间的世界

孤立和孤独 断开连接

和不受保护 现在想象一个

创造和保护神圣空间的世界

,你帮助

使这些空间成为可能

神圣空间创造了一个避难所 连接

我们 我们的故事 es

和保护我们的自由创造连接

保护这是我们所有的工作我们

所有的责任我们必须

创造

连接和保护神圣的空间

谢谢你们

[鼓掌]

你们