Copy
View this email in your browser

Welcome to Intersections, the newsletter of the Institute for Liberatory Innovation.

You’re receiving Intersections because you're a subscriber or because we thought you might be interested in our work.   If you find what you read here compelling, we hope you'll  share Intersections with your friends, family and colleagues. 

From the Director


 Lucinda J. Garthwaite

The turn of the year is a few days away. This year, “good riddance” is everywhere. I think that may be a mistake.
 
Good riddance expresses relief that a troublesome thing is over, a difficult person moved on. There’s dismissal in good riddance, a wave of a hand, a back turned. I’m done with you.
 
There’s no doubt that 2020 has been a particularly difficult year for many, but it’s also been an extraordinary opportunity to learn and change. I think if we pause in our determined march away from 2020, turn around and really behold it, we’ll see a generous and exacting teacher. 
 
This is especially so for those of us who have long benefitted from the very systems 2020 has held unflatteringly to the light - health care, political power, policing, criminal justice, housing and economy to name just a few. There is really no excuse, for those of us who can, not to look hard at the lessons of 2020; the abundance of books, articles, websites, blogs, videos and virtual gatherings focused on that examination call out for our attention.
 
One of those is Long Time Coming: Reckoning with Race in America (link below) by writer, teacher and pastor Michael Eric Dyson.  Toward the end he writes,   “If justice is what love sounds like in public*, then patience is what mercy sounds like out loud, and forgiveness is the accent with which grace speaks.”  That declaration promises redemption, but Dyson doesn’t stop there, “None of this means that white folks don’t face a huge moment of reckoning.  How they handle this can shape the nation’s history for years to come” (p.178).
 
For sure, 2020 insists on reckoning with systemic racism and race-based violence. The still growing number of unarmed Black men killed by police is a stark reminder of that. The deeply uneven death toll of the pandemic on Black, Indigenous and Latinx people, people with disabilities, and people who are financially insecure also calls out for reckoning.  The same for education, prisons, how we care (and don’t) for elders, trans and non-binary people. A stunning (to some) refusal of so many to consider collective well-being over individual decisions about something so seemingly small as a mask calls out for reckoning with the bedrock American ideal of individualism. 
 
This list goes on, but reckoning is, for me, the Word of the Year. Reckoning requires turning around and looking forward, both. It requires humility and sitting with very challenging emotions, including no small amount of painful regret, even shame. It requires sinking deeper than dogma and ideology. It requires thinking.
 
That’s what the ILI was founded for:  to contribute to our collective work of thinking, to experiment and learn together, and to turn that into action, generating strategies for a more equitable and non-violent future. 2020 has given us a unique opportunity to take up that work.  So I’m not saying good riddance. I’m saying, I see you, 2020. Thank you. I’m paying attention.
 
 
* Cornel West first offered this notion, notably in a 2011 speech at Howard University.
 
___________________________________
 A Note of Thanks To All of You-

This is the last issue of Intersections for this founding year of the ILI. The first issue of 2021 will land in your inbox on January 8th.  Thank you to all of you who read it each week, who pass it on to friends and colleagues, and send me notes of appreciation and encouragement.  The ILI started with an early morning idea in February, and a call to a trusted friend and mentor to say, what do you think?  She responded with the first “Yes”, and the affirmations have flooded in since. The ILI has quickly grown far beyond me, with a terrific board of stewards, advisors, research associates and 65 (and counting!) founding donors. The ILI is a “we” now, and I’m excited about the difference we can make in the coming years.  
 
If you’d like to become a founding donor, this is the week to do it, with a contribution in any amount (seriously, so far our founding donors have contributed $1.00 to $10,000!).  Those of us who have said yes so far would love your company.  Click here to donate online, or send a check dated before 12/31/20 to PO Box 624, Montpelier, Vermont. 05601.
 
Please remember that we encourage donations in honor or memory of someone you have loved and/or respected.  We’re grateful for their light in our work.

Thank you again.
 

 

Institute People and Projects.

It’s only been 10 days since our last issue, and those interrupted by several holidays, so there’s not much news to report, but we do want to say ...
 
... Congratulations to ILI Advisor and 2020 TED Fellow Daniel Alexander Jones, whose June 2020 TED talk, "What To Do When Everything Feels Broken" has been selected as a 2020 TED Editor's Pick. There's a link to all of the TED Editor's Picks for 2020 in the Liberatory Resources section of this issue of Intersections.
 
... Welcome to all the founding donors who joined us in the past four weeks. The list is too long to print here, but you can read it on the About Us page of the ILI website.
 
...  Thank you to all who contributed to our end-of-year Founding Donor campaign! We surpassed our all-important goal of 60 founding donors.  This substantial show of support as we begin is a major part establishing a solid and credible foundation for the ILI.   Founding donors have contributed a total of almost $35,000 toward our foundational goal of $70,000 from individual and donor advised funds.  Since the start of December, founding donors have added $5,751 to our financial foundation.  That’s well short of our $25,000 end-of-year goal, but a big step forward. We know this is a particularly challenging time and we are very grateful.

Our Founding Donor Campaign will end on December 31st. After that, we’ll continue working to build our financial foundation of $145,000 through individual contributions, donor-advised funds and foundations. If you would like to give a major gift of $10,000 or more, please email lgarthwaite@liberatoryinstitute.org.

 

Liberatory Resources.

Long Time Coming: Reckoning with Race in America.  (2020) Michael Eric Dyson. St. Martin’s Press.
 
Featured in the Director’s Message above.  This is a link to a December 3,2020 book review by Gabino Igelesias at NPR.com.  If you decide to buy this book, we encourage you to do that through a Black-owned Bookstore or your local bookseller.
 
2020 TED Editor's Picks  (curated Videos)

The inclusion of our Advisor Daniel Alexander Jones alerted us to this rich collection of TED talks from 2020, described as, ". . . what captured our imaginations, reflected our emotions and sparked hope for a better tomorrow? Here's a wide-ranging list of the talks that stayed with us this year (along with some hidden gems), selected by the editorial team at TED."


 
We invite all Intersections readers to contribute resources that document and support liberatory change.
Send resources to
information@liberatoryinstitute.org.
 
Please send your thoughts and comments about this or any Intersections issue to information@liberatoryinstitute.org

The next issue of Intersections will arrive on Friday January 8th.

If you’d prefer not to receive this newsletter, we understand; just click “unsubscribe,” below. 

Copyright © The Institute for Liberatory Innovation, All rights reserved.
Our mailing address is:
PO Box 624. Montpelier, Vermont. 05602
Email us at:
information@liberatoryinstitute.org


Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.