Saturday, Jul 4, 2009

workaround

workaround

SMTWTFS
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Activism against the odds

May 12, 2008

Shanaye Mitchell’s story of juggling study, activism and care for her mother inspired attendees at the April 30 State of Democracy in Minnesota planning conference, sponsored by the League of Women Voters. Mitchell juggles her work on a planned double-major, double-minor in French, Italian, Chinese and Japanese, attending the University of Minnesota on full scholarship, while also participating in spoken word forums, online activism, and serving as a personal care assistant to her mother.

A 2007 North Community High School graduate, Mitchell intends to return and teach languages at North. This Horatio Alger scholar also dreams of studying abroad, starting her own business and someday, working as an interpreter at the United Nations. She was one of four engaged, amazing teens telling the conference what citizenship meant to them, and the hard work it takes that they are willing to give to build a community they want to grow with them.

Mitchell, the youngest of four children, is the only one that provides her mother constant care,. She explains: “She’s permanently disabled by scarcoidosis. It’s narrowing her spinal cord and scarring her lungs.” Sarcoidosis is an inflammation producing granulomas throughout the body. In the United States, African American women like Mitchell’s mother are most likely to contract this condition and experience it more severely than other races.

“It’s hard to juggle all of this,” Mitchell acknowledges. “School work, work, and taking care of my mother. I realized last semester that if I don’t thrive academically, then I cannot and won’t be in a position to help my mother, help my family thrive.”

Rena Mora, of the Urban Embassy outreach and education program, emphasized that individual determination and hard work are not enough. Mora’s focused ease and casual demeanor makes it hard to believe she’s raising teenagers and leading a movement. As a mother to four young men she says she recognizes the importance of keeping neighborhood ties strong and stable.

“We have to know, as parents what’s going on in the community,” Mora said. “We have to share the importance to our whole community, the importance of being active and aware of public policy because it impacts all our lives.“

The nonprofit Urban Embassy is inspired by St. Paul city council member Melvin Carter and aligned with TakeAction Minnesota. They aim to mobilize, educate minority and under represented voters through community meetings and structured legislation, like ‘re-enfranchisement’ of the 65,000 Minnesotans convicted of felony, impacting 22.4% of all African-American men living in the state.

“I’m a community advocate here to uplift and protect our worth, lend it a voice because it’s critical to teach and empower our community,” says Mora.

Sina Black, is stylish, spritely and a most-mobile citizen activist working with Community Action Partnership in St. Paul. As a CAP Fellow and voter engagement organizer, Black has spent the past three years co-creating a blueprint to end poverty.

“We lead discussions. We educate the community [and] region as people living with poverty. After I finish my degree, I will soon run for office. I’m thinking for city council because I truly represent the North End, low-income voices in the community.”

The League of Women Voters, sponsor of the conference, is an institution promoting democratic involvement and self-actualization has been active for more than 80 years. The recurring them attendees took from the conference was: we have hope for the future and together, we can do something.

Rachel Dykoski lives and writes in the Whittier neighborhood in Minneapolis.

Article Tags:

Comments

Post new comment

The Twin Cities Daily Planet encourages readers to submit comments voicing their views in a constructive and civil fashion. The editors reserve the right to edit comments for length and clarity, and we may decline to publish comments that advertise services or goods, take an intemperate tone, or that contain potentially libelous allegations.
The content of this field is kept private and will not be shown publicly.
CAPTCHA
This question is for testing whether you are a human visitor and to prevent automated spam submissions.
15 + 3 =
Solve this simple math problem and enter the result. E.g. for 1+3, enter 4.

workaround

THEATER | Cirque du Soleil's "Kooza": A big flippin' deal

Near the beginning of Cirque du Soleil’s Kooza, a large number of grinning men and women in festive, ambiguously ethnic dress come hopping out with their arms spread wide, performing flips and pirouettes as a multitiered bandshell rolls forward. Brass blares, drums thump, and lights flash wildly as a shapely singer winds her hips and sings ecstatic praises in nonsense syllables. It’s a convincing dramatization of the reception President Bush expected American troops to receive when they arrived in Baghdad. MORE »

Stories We're Working On

In progress

These are some of the stories we are working on. We invite and encourage you to contribute to these stories, or to suggest other stories that you would like to see covered.

REPORTER’S NOTEBOOK | North Minneapolis We’ll tell you what the judge decides on the flurry of lawsuits around last winter’s Jordan Area Community Council controversy as soon as the decision is made (probably the week of July 6). What do you think about what’s been going on at JACC, in Jordan, and around the Northside? Tell us what you know – and what you think we should be covering.

REPORTER’S NOTEBOOK | Background checks bar park volunteers
Minneapolis parks have recently tightened enforcement of rules about background checks for volunteers. But does the “systemic bias of the criminal justice system” mean that many African American males will be barred from serving as volunteers? We want to hear your ideas.

REPORTER’S NOTEBOOK | Hmong Freedom Celebration and Sports Tournament Coming up this weekend! We’re looking for community input about the sports tournament, your experiences at the tournament, how it has changed over the years, what the gathering of Hmong from around the country and around the world means, and any other thoughts you might have about the weekend.

MORE »

REPORTER'S NOTEBOOK | Fabulous Fourth

Everybody knows about Taste of Minnesota, but did you know about fireworks at Powderhorn Park or buskers on St. Anthony Main? We asked you to tell us about your Fourth of July, and here are some of the events we heard about. It’s not too late to tell us more at editor@tcdailyplanet.net MORE »

We get comments

Recent comments

OPINION | Barb Johnson responds: Megan Goodmundson – Very nicely said, Barb. We need leaders full of substance, we need campaigns to focus on uniting strengths and not dividing differences. Our Northside communities deserve nothing less than that. Thank you for your committment and service. MORE »