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Microsoft Office 2010 Key The Atlanta Friends Meet
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Banner drawing by Dowling Architects, Atlanta Home Worship Groups About Us Events Rentals Members & Attenders Contact Us O.R.A.I.I.A.R.H. Queries Queries from "Our Role As Individuals In America's Racial History" (ORAIIARH) Revised 2009 As we move toward becoming a more welcoming multicultural, multiracial Meeting, we want to take active steps toward eliminating institutional racism that has historically prevented certain racial/ethnic groups from full participation in Friends Meetings in the United States. As a way of living up to our beliefs and reaching our goal of an inclusive community, we continue to ask groups and committees with the Meeting to regularly reflect on a set of queries in order to be more intentional about processes and practices that work to eliminate institutional racism and foster a welcoming multicultural, multiracial community within the Meeting. I. Committees and Volunteers: a. How are members of the committee/volunteers recruited? Are all attenders/members of the meeting given ample opportunity to know about the work, to sign up, or to be asked to work on the group? b. Are attenders/members who are people of color asked to join the committee as well as white attenders/members? Do we avoid tokenism by approaching people of color to join committees based on their interests or skills? c. Do we avoid stereotypes when asking for or assigning volunteers to jobs traditionally associated with low status work,Microsoft Office 2010 Key, such as potluck cleanup or childcare? d. Do committee members genuinely listen to and validate viewpoints of members whose racial or cultural backgrounds are different from their own? Can people of color on this committee feel that white members really hear them? For example, does a suggestion made by an African American F/friend carry the same weight as a similar one made by a European American F/friend? e. If the committee is homogeneous racially and culturally, do committee members stop and think about how the matter at hand would be viewed from a different cultural and racial perspective? f. Are committee members who are people of color given the same chance to speak as whites,Office 2007 Product Key, and encouraged to participate without being put on the spot or made to be a racial spokesperson? For example, do we avoid putting African American F/friends in the position of speaking for all people of African descent? g. Are all members of a committee allowed to express themselves as individuals without having judgments made about their racial group? For instance, are African American members given the same chance as others on the committee to be silent, talkative, serious, funny, early, late, organized or disorganized without assumptions being made about their racial group? h. Within a framework of the Quaker manner of conducting business – opening and closing with silence and using a sense of the meeting for decisions - are various styles of participation and orientation accepted and welcomed, not just the solely task-oriented, strictly time conscious model typically associated with white males? i. If the work of the committee involves working with groups outside the Meeting, do we choose groups composed of people of color or well-integrated groups to work with? Do we treat these groups as equal partners and respect their leadership? j. Are issues in communities of color given importance in selecting social issues to work on? For example, do we actively work to correct unequal treatment of African Americans in the justice system, education, and healthcare? k. Do we turn to African heritage/African American groups for their expertise when the Meeting wants to become involved in issues related to Black communities? l. Do we form long-term alliances with faith communities or social justice groups composed primarily of people of color rather than limiting our participation to an occasional potluck, workday, or monetary contribution? II. Greeters/ Welcoming newcomers: a. Are greeters equally welcoming to all newcomers, regardless of race? Are people of color who are newcomers sincerely welcomed rather than being fussed over or ignored? b. Do greeters adopt and consistently use a standard procedure for everyone coming in the door, for example, saying to everyone, “Welcome. Please either pick up a nametag or make one for yourself”? c. Do greeters avoid questions that may be interpreted negatively by people of color? For example,Office 2010 Standard, “May I help you?” or “How did you get involved in Quakerism?” may sound unwelcoming to African Americans because these questions imply that the person is a stranger to Friends and/or to our Meeting when neither may be the case. d. Do greeters avoid the assumption that people of color are new to Atlanta Friends Meeting, to Quakerism or to Quaker testimonies? III. Materials (for example for library,Microsoft Office 2010 Product Key, religious education, study group): a. Are writers of color, including African Americans, well represented? b. Do materials and activities used in Religious Education and adult study groups draw from a broad range of racial and cultural backgrounds? c. Are positive, realistic views of people of color, including people of African descent, presented? d. Are current concerns of people from varying racial/ethnic groups included in the curriculum/program in addition to historical concerns? For example, are concerns about institutional racism or disparities in health as experienced by people of African descent included in addition to slavery or segregation/civil rights issues? e. Is the whole history of Friends and people of African descent made known, rather than just the positive aspects? For instance, do materials indicate that many Friends enslaved African Americans during the 1700s or that Friends Meetings were very slow to admit Friends of African descent to membership and that their membership numbers are low even today? f. Is sufficient material on Friends of color such as Paul Cuffee, Sarah Mapps Douglas, or Bayard Rustin included in the study of Quaker history? g. Are materials available that accurately represent African, Latin American, and Asian Friends today? Do the materials make it clear that there are more Friends in Africa than on any other continent? h. Are the materials respectful of Friends United Meeting and Evangelical Friends traditions as practiced by most Friends in Africa, Latin America and Asia? i. Are illustrations, photos, movies, and music free of stereotypes? Are materials available that counter stereotypes with facts about people of color? Are developmentally appropriate opportunities made available for children and youth to discuss stereotypes of people in non-dominant cultures? j. Are people of color including people of African descent portrayed in a variety of roles and settings? k. Do pictures represent realistic facial features of African Americans and other people of color, rather than looking like colored- in white people? l. Are children and adults of many racial/ethnic and national groups well represented pictorially? Are artifacts in the classroom representative of a variety of racial/ethnic cultures and national groups? m. Do children’s books, dolls, puppets, and other toys accurately portray children and adults from a variety of racial and ethnic groups? For instance, do children’s materials showing a broad range of families include families with African American men as good fathers and husbands? Do children’s stories avoid the pitfall of always having European American children in a leader or helper role with a child of color in the sidekick or victim role? n. In choosing DVDs or movies for group activities (for example Young Friends gatherings), do we choose movies/DVDs that portray people of color in a positive light, for example, DVD’s/movies that portray strong African American families? o. Are movies that have a strong emotional impact, such as “Amistad,” discussed in a way that is sensitive to the strong feelings evoked? p. If there are racist elements in a movie, such as all the villains having dark-skin or foreign accents, are they discussed critically? IV. Outings (Young Friends, hiking group, restaurant /movies/ theater outings) a. Is care taken to choose outing destinations that are integrated and welcoming to people of color? b. Are venues of varying racial groups chosen for outings; for example, going to an African American film festival or an event at a historically black college/university? c. Are white people in the group alert to discriminatory treatment toward people of color, and are steps taken to prevent or intervene against such treatment? (Examples of discrimination: The person of color might be treated as if he/she were separate from the rest of the group, be followed, watched carefully,Microsoft Office 2007 Pro, or given inferior service.) d. Do white people in the group validate the feelings of fear or anger expressed by people of color in situations where they have experienced discriminatory treatment rather than whites treating these feelings lightly or ignoring them? Back to the Equality Testimony Back to About Us |
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