Tag Archives: Social Justice

Uganda Week 1

Week 1

 

After leaving my home Saturday afternoon, and traveling for 38 hours, I finally reached Jinja on Monday night.  I’ve been wanting to call this my pilgrimage since I found out I received this research fellowship through the Buffett Institute at Northwestern. Not because of the strenuous initial journey to get here, but because of the immediate and unforeseen implications this trip will have on my life and life trajectory.

I’ll be constructing and helping to implement a waste management system for the Bugembe Town Council, which has 33,000 residents, solely recommended by my own research. At 18 and while pursuing degrees in Journalism and Sociology, I’ll have grown men, with business and engineering degrees, gawking at my words and backing my decisions– I understand how backwards and ridiculous this is. I had planned to stay away from the pseudo eco-tourism that a lot of us college students partake in during the summer, and still hope to, but I now see how hard that is when working with universities and other institutions.

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Kakira

I’m staying in Kakira a small town in the Bugembe Town Council, which is right outside of the much bigger Jinja Town. Kakira is an entirely gated town as it lies on the land of  Kakira Sugar Works factory, a multi million dollar company that follows all the bureaucratic rules of any transcontinental entity, no matter its location (bordering one of the poorest slums in Uganda). I feel like economic inequality follows me everywhere I go and has become so apparent in my life and my awareness after my first year at NU, but I know it’s not following me. It’s just everywhere and in every capitalistic state. However, from my short observations, it doesn’t seem to affect daily life as much as it does in the US. This could be because it’s not as drastic as in the US– here you’re either poor or really poor (in terms of global wealth), and the way of life seems much more purposeful. You have your role, and you do it. That is up to your interpretation in comparison to life in the US.

Being Black

I’ll never stop being Black, so it’ll never stop being an issue. I’ve come to the realization (at this point in my life)  that it is honestly hard being Black anywhere on this planet. In the US, you are backtracked and stopped in your tracks by the institutional racism that hasn’t been capped or even truly combatted since this country’s creation. And from what I’ve been told, in European and Asian countries, you’re seen as an exhibit in a museum– met with stares and awkward touching. In Africa, at least in my experience as a lighter-skinned Black person, you’re met with looks of confusion. My Chinese colleague has been met with smiles and ecstatic greetings, while I’ve often been ignored, which isn’t necessarily a bad thing at all, but telling nonetheless. A lot of people think I’m Muslim and East-Asian, definitely a new one, but I can’t blame them. Our country has failed to teach the atrocities and true history of slavery, so how can I expect Africans to believe that I’m supposedly  one of them. The only difference is– I have generations of my family’s colonizer’s blood flowing through my body. Coincidentally, as I’ve been here I began reading the Autobiography of Malcolm X, and have had to combat his early Back to Africa beliefs. America isn’t ours, but Africa really isn’t either. Especially in a contemporary sense, after my week here, I’ve seen how impossible an African-American integration into Africa would be. The roots of our cultures may be similar, but not enough to bridge the intense culturally and psychologically gaps that separate us.

But to end this on a good note, my host family is amazing and they have two little children that I love. That is all, see you next week and Brazil is winning the World Cup.

Developing Community within the Black community at Northwestern University

 

 

Is there a singular Black experience at NU?

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First-year students Symone Jackson, Sannah Boyd and Salina Tsegai embrace in a group hug, on April 24, 2018, inside of Northwestern University’s Technological Institute. Although the event,”Real Talk: Fragmentation in the Black Community”, was meant to highlight the issues within the Black community at NU, it turned into a space for Black students to highlight their “blackness” and support for each other.

“Real Talk” is a series of dialogues hosted by FMO’s first-year executive board. This event,”Real Talk: Fragmentation in the Black Community”, was an opportunity to dialogue about the various divisions and fragments in the Black community at Northwestern.

Our Black is Beautiful!


Mari Gashaw, Freshman Executive Board

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“Real Talk” board members Nelson Okunlola and Taylor Bolding engage with the growing crowd before the room change. The event was planned by the Freshman Executive Board of NU’s Black student alliance “For Members Only” and was initially held in a small classroom before being moved to a bigger venue in Lecture Room 2.

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After the room change, facilitator Robert Brown, Director of Social Justice Education at Northwestern University, begins an exercise meant to establish the issues (listed behind him) within the Black community at NU.

This “Real Talk” event was meant to be a safe space for Black students to voice both their struggles and triumphs within the community, while featuring voices and identities that may be normally silenced on NU’s campus.

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Rohan Gupta, a mixed-race first year student at NU, reflecting during one of the individual exercises of the night. For some students, this event served as a space for reflection, as they contemplated their personal experience within and outside of the Black community at NU.

 

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First-year student-athlete Earnest Brown and first-year student Emma Evans, are seen discussing the misconceptions found between Black student-athletes and non-athletes on campus.Students were able to voice their frustrations within the community to their peers.

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First-year student Joseph Miller breaking out into dance. The conclusion of the event turned the often glum Technological Institute into a space of “Black Joy”.

 

BridgeBuilders Foundation: Navigating the Black Experience at a PWI

After publishing “What You Should Know about the Black Experience at Northwestern University”, I was asked to create a short video for the BridgeBuilders Foundation detailing my experience at Northwestern University as well as giving advice to upcoming students at PWIs.

In this 10 minute video, not only do I detail my experience and struggles to an extent, but attempt to serve as a voice of support for upcoming students.

I have been asked a million and one times, “What is something I wish I knew before attending Northwestern?” and up until a few weeks ago I had no answer. My answer became eminent to me after my first spring break while attending Northwestern. While my peers literally traveled all around the world, I went home to Carson/ Wilmington , Calif. where I spent time with my loved ones and friends. It was during this time I realized that in order to get the most out of my experience at an institution that was not built for me or established with the idea that there would be students like me attending it, I must stop looking for myself and my home in everyone I encountered. This is not me attempting to fault my peers for the circumstances they live through, or even Northwestern for the circumstances it’s campus creates for students like me, but to acknowledge my daily struggles as I attempt to adjust to life away from home. I hate to be a race-baiter and even more a wealth- baiter,  but the elite socioeconomic culture here at NU is inseparable from my experience. An experience where I am not necessarily comfortable in many situations I find myself in on a daily basis.

So back to the point of advice, the central focus of this video. I advise all students of diverse backgrounds, who are going to elite and PWI institutions that’ll try to paint their campuses as “diverse”, to attempt to detach their home and what they’re used to culturally, from their experience and outlooks at these institutions. It is a completely different world for me, and many others, that must be adapted to until were able to make it our own.

YouTube video

What You Should Know About The Black Experience at Northwestern University

Evanston, Ill- After a historic spike in Black matriculation at Northwestern University over the past three years, you would think it would be easier for administrators and Black students to collaborate and acculturate, but that is not the truth felt by many Black students on campus.

“One of the things I learned at Northwestern was how to support myself because no one else is there to support you, especially being Black,” said Northwestern University class of 2017 graduate and former Associated Student Government executive-vice president Lawrence “Macs” Vinson, 22.

Oddly as Northwestern has made the push to create a healthier and safer community for its Black students, the more Black students have felt isolated and forgotten by the university, according to interviews with past and present students. This may be a result of of past events and facts including the substantially low percent of Black students on campus which has not surpassed 10% as an undergraduate population in 33 years, according to Northwestern University’s demographic data.

“There is very much difference between diversity and inclusion here. There’s 10% Black students in the class of 2021, but we’re not included in anything,”noted Taylor Bolding, 18, President of the Freshman Executive Board for Northwestern’s Black Student Union.

It is often debated in academia, especially in today’s climate, if it is the students or the university’s job to create an inclusive and accepting environment for students of color on campuses.

Elizabeth Aries, Professor of Psychology at Amherst College and author of Speaking of Race and Class: The Student Experience at an Elite College (2012) said, “The college has to lead the way on creating an inclusive environment. They can’t bring people in and not help build something inclusive. They are inviting students of color into a space where they are not comfortable, not knowledgeable, and not fully prepared for what they are going to encounter.”

Many Black student’s on campus agree, especially when relating to Sustained Dialogues on campus, which were started in 2015. Sustained Dialogue is a “student-facilitated program that encourages conversation across lines of difference with other Northwestern students”, according to Northwestern’s website.

“I personally did not feel like it was my requirement to teach white people how to engage with me and try to understand me,” said Northwestern University class of 2016 graduate and former community organizer Matthew Wright, 23, on why he feels it should not be the students job to educate their peers.

The birth of Sustained Dialogue can be directly linked to an event during the 2015-2016 school year, when the university attempted to reorganize the setup of the Black House on campus, which is the only historical Black site on campus where students of color gather every single day. This setup would have moved many administrative offices into the Black House and disrupted the solidarity and commodity that Black students had developed there, according to former Northwestern students.

“[The Black community] was really struggling, especially with all of the conflict with the Black house. It was really difficult to keep Black people motivated and accountable on campus when they didn’t feel supported,” said Wright.

The university has since realized that having the Black House and other spaces like ‘home’ are extremely important to all students in a place where they don’t feel necessarily supported or comfortable on campus.

This was reaffirmed by Dr. Lesley-Ann Brown-Henderson, the Director of Diversity and Inclusion at Northwestern University, when she said, “[Northwestern] has staff in the Black House and the MCC aimed at creating home communities for student. We want students to feel at home in our spaces as well as outside of our spaces.”

The Black House controversy also led to Northwestern releasing “The African American/ Black Student Experience” curated by the Black Student Experience Task Force during the subsequent summer of the Black House issues.

However, this report showed that the distrust between the Black community and the administration at Northwestern has caused many Black students to downplay any attempts made by the school to foster a more inclusive community for Black students on campus.
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The African-American/Black Student Experience Report

When confronted about this idea Dr. Lesley-Ann Brown-Henderson pondered for almost a whole minute before saying, “I could see how students would see that or say that. I work on the ground every day with a lot of staff who are working really hard to make Northwestern different, so of course my perspective is different. I know [faculty] are on the ground doing work with students and I think sometimes perhaps students aren’t feeling it as directly as they would like to.”

It is evident that the Black community is not completely satisfied with their experience on campus, but they have significantly failed at voicing their dissatisfaction with both the administrators and their peers.

“I thought the TND on diversity was a really powerful one, especially for marginalized groups, and I thought the university was doing a good job on trying to get student’s to support each other.”, said Northwestern freshman Christian Braun , 19, who identifies as a white male and republican.

That opinion is almost directly opposite from most of the Black community, but for the most part their peers don’t know that.

At the end of the day, no matter how students feel about their experience at Northwestern, all of the power lies with the administrators and their actions towards how they support their students, no matter of their race.

“When students ask for change at a university, the school has two choices: they can either acquiesce with the demands to a certain event or just wait it out,” said Vinson on what’s the next move for Northwestern University.