SURJ MOTHER’S DAY ACTION TOOLKIT
Raising Race Conscious Children is honored to have partnered with Showing Up for Racial Justice (SURJ) to create this Mother’s Day Action Toolkit. Below, you will find book suggestions and talking points/questions you can ask your children as you take action for racial justice on Mother’s Day.
The action toolkit is also available for download as a PDF.
As we watch the protests in Baltimore, we are reminded of that so many Black mothers mourn the deaths of their children to police brutality. Please share the Mother’s Day Action Toolkit with other families and parents.
Thanks for being brave, bold and supportive. Let us know if you have any feedback, comments or questions at info@showingupforracialjustice.org.
SURJ MOTHER’S DAY ACTION TOOLKIT
ISSUE AT HAND
“We must acknowledge — with eyes and minds wide open — the world as it is if we want to change it.” -Charles Blow, New York Times
White parents and families can shape and shift the way children think and talk about race—by explicitly talking about race and injustice with them. The goal of these conversations is to prepare young people to understand racism, and work toward racial justice. For white parents, it’s a great opportunity to build these conversations into everyday life.
WHAT CAN WE DO
As white people showing up for racial justice, join us in engaging white children in our goal of fairness and equality. We want dignity and justice for all people in the U.S. In just the past few weeks, Freddie Gray, Mya Hall (both in Baltimore) and Rekia Boyd (in Chicago) were killed by the police. Let us remember their names and take action in their honor to guarantee that this doesn’t happen to any other children and adults from our communities.
Check out our action items that come in various shapes and sizes designed for your lifestyles. Pick an action or two or more that feels doable make sense to you to do.
GET INFORMED
Read up on how children learn about race and discuss it with friends, family, and organizations. Check out these helpful outlines and fact sheets:
- Children Are Not Colorblind: How Young Children Learn Race by Erin N. Winkler, Ph.D.
- Excerpt from Nurture Shock by Po Bronson and Ashley Merriman
- Raising Race Conscious Children, a blog for parents
- 7 Things To Do When Your Kid points out Someone’s Difference by Rachel Garlinghouse
- Parenting and Baltimore: Where to Begin
- How I would talk to my future four year old about Michael Brown and Eric Garner
2 MINUTE ACTION: IN JUST ONE CLICK YOU CAN SPREAD THE WORD
Sample Tweets:
- “Color-blind”=racial inequity. Be race conscious!www.raceconscious.org #MothersDay #BlackSpring#parenting #BlackLivesMatter #BaltimoreUprising #Showup4RJ
- #Every28hours there’s another #FreddieGray #BlackLivesMatter @Showup4RJ #MothersDay #ParentsforRJ #BlackSpring
30 MINUTE ACTION: SIT DOWN AND READ WITH YOUR CHILD.
For any parent or family members who wants to begin talking about race with children of any age (including babies!):
Read the book “More, More, More, Said the Baby” by Vera B. Williams to your child. For more information about reading this book with your child, please visit here.
As you read, stop and notice race out loud. For example, you might say:
- “Look, this baby has peachy skin that people call White.”
- “This baby has brown skin that people call Black.”
- “I noticed that the grandma has peachy skin and her grandbaby has brown skin.”
With a child who is talking (two-years or older), you might ask: “What color is your/my skin?” and think about how to describe your own skin colors.
You also might read “The Colors of Us” by Karen Katz to further describe your skin colors, and even do an art project together around your skin colors, as the character does in this book.
For parents or family members who are already talking about race with their children:
Read the book “The Other Side” by Jacqueline Woodson. As you read, or after reading this book, you may ask the following questions:
- Why do you think Mama said, “Don’t climb over that fence when you play”? (Explain what segregation means and give the historical context for this book.)
- The girl on the fence wanted to play with the girls, but Sandra said no without even asking the opinion of the other girls. Why do you think Sandra said no? What would you have done if you were Sandra? Why?
- Why do you think Jacqueline Woodson wrote this story?
- How would this story have been different (or the same) if it took place here in New York City in the present day?
As a follow-up, you might encourage your child to learn more about present-day and historical segregation by interviewing a family member, neighbor, or friend, or even doing a google search for census data on present-day segregation. Click here to learn more about how to support your children to identify, explore, and take action on race-related issues.
For parents who have children in middle school and high school this is a perfect time to have conversations with them about what is happening in Baltimore and around the country with police violence and Black men in particular being killed. What are they hearing at school? Do they know they facts? How do they feel about what is happening? How is is impacting or not impacting their classmates? Ask them if there is one thing that they want to do to make a stand for what they think is right.
1 HOUR ACTION: WRITE A LETTER TO THE EDITOR OR A BLOGPOST
Letter to the Editor: Write an letter about why police brutality is an important issue for you and your family and what needs to change. Post it on our Facebook page.
Click here for tips on writing a letter to the editor.
Here are some writing prompts:
- As a white person, this case matters to me because…
- I am speaking up and raising my voice to say enough is enough because…
- Freddie Gray, Rekia Boyd and Mia Hall would still be alive today if…
- I support #BaltimoreUprising protesters because…
1 HOUR + ACTION: ORGANIZE A MOTHER’S DAY ACTION AT YOUR HOME OR A LOCAL BOOKSTORE
- Read one of the above books as a community of parents and children. Raise awareness that mothers of Black teenagers are losing their children to police violence in Baltimore and everywhere.
- Partner with a bookstore and ask them to stock copies of “More, More, More, Said the Baby,” “The Other Side,” and “The Colors of Us” and make them available along with copies of this toolkit.
1 HOUR + ACTION: ORGANIZE A MOTHER’S DAY HOUSE PARTY
Invite friends, family, and members of your community over to your house for a dialogue on the #BaltimoreUprising. Choose an article or video to discuss or talk about how racism is impacts your community. Ask people who attend to donate to the Legal/Bail Fund for Baltimore.
For tips on holding a house party, see these great resources from our affiliate groups:
- House Party Kit — Kentuckians for the Commonwealth
- Living Room Conversations — Rural Organizing Project
- Building a Movement through Monthly Dialogues — Alliance of White Anti-Racists Everywhere-Los Angeles (AWARE-LA)
ADDITIONAL RESOURCES
Blogs/ Writing/ Books:
Raising Race Conscious Children– new blog focused on bringing race into families. A few great posts from the blog including Why I talk about race when I read to my Toddler and Supporting Children to Take Action
Parenting for Collective Liberation– includes great posts like – 5 Things to Know about Talking to Children about Race and some others
Teaching for Change– The best selection of children’s books on racism and other topics
Skipping Stones, An international multicultural magazine
Rethinking Schools Magazine– emphasizes problems facing urban schools, particularly issues of race
That’s Not Fair! by Ann Pelo and Fran Davidson- A guide for activism projects with young children
Open Minds to Equality- by Nancy Schneidewind- A source book of tools of learning activities for Equity
Boys Will Be Men: Raising Our Sons for Courage, Caring and Community, by Paul Kivel-guide for parents who are raising sons
Helping Teens Stop Violence, Build Community and Stand for Justice by Allan Creighton and Paul Kivel- prepares adults for working with young people by providing a theoretical framework for violence prevention work along with exercises in being effective allies to youth.
Putting the Movement Back into Civil Rights Teaching, by Deborah Menkart- a teaching resource book that emphasizes the power of people through a diversity of stories, essays, photographs, and interactive and interdisciplinary lessons.
Everyday Acts against Racism: Raising Children in a Multiracial World by Maureen Reddy- A book of essays by mothers and teachers that examines the effects of racism on our children and communities
Teaching Resources:
Sparks: The Anti-Bias Curriculum by Louise Derman- Tools for becoming an anti-bias teacher
Beyond Heroes and Holidays by Enid Lee, et al.- A k-12 guide to anti-racist multicultural education
Teaching about 1963 in 2013: Civil Rights Movement History Resources
The New Press Guide to Multicultural Resources for Young Readers– by Dapne Muse
The First R: How Children Learn Race and Racism by Debra van Ausdale
Organizations:
Contact: rebefred14@gmail.com 502.802.6794. RSVP here: Million Moms March
Border Crossers, a racial justice organization for teachers
Facing Today, a project of Facing History
Teaching Tolerance, a project of the Southern Poverty Law Center
Rethinking Schools, an organization dedicated to helping to shape reform throughout the public school system in the U.S.
Zinn Education Project, promotes and supports the teaching of people’s history in middle and high school classrooms across the U.S.
Family Diversity Projects, organization dedicated to educating people of all ages about diversity.
Syracuse Cultural Workers, publisher of social justice materials.
Northern Sun, publisher of social justice products and materials.
DOWNLOAD THE ENTIRE SURJ MOTHERS DAY ACTION KIT AS A PDF.
ABOUT SURJ
Mission
SURJ is a national network of groups and individuals organizing white people for racial justice. Through community organizing, mobilizing, and education, SURJ moves white people to act as part of a multi-racial majority for justice with passion and accountability. We work to connect people across the country while supporting and collaborating with local and national racial justice organizing efforts. SURJ provides a space to build relationships, skills, and political analysis to act for change.
For more information please visit our website:http://www.showingupforracialjustice.org
Thanks to Sachi Feris, Dara Silverman, Paul Kivel, Sam Hamlin, JLove Calderon, Amy Dudley, Murphy Stack, Carla Wallace, Heather Sweeney, Randall Smith and many others for time, energy, work and feedback to create this Action Kit.
__
Click here for more information on participating in a Raising Race Conscious Children interactive workshop/webinar or small group workshop series.