Tuesday
We presented some background on the ongoing water crises the people of the Navajo Nation are facing, including pollution from coal and uranium mining, and a lack of infrastructure for clean running water. We had a plan to bring up the idea of "disposable" people, to connect to comments made by Flint residents we heard on Monday, but our students made that connection before we even prompted them. We asked if the water crises facing Flint and the Navajo Nation have anything to do with the populations there - that is, would this be happening if those populations were middle-class white people - and they thought that yes, it did have to do with particular groups being written off.
We then asked them to make maps of their hometowns, and to consider which areas are more and less privileged, and, if there was a water crisis there (say, a major drought), which areas would lose access to clean water first.
While they worked on those maps, one of our more involved students seemed stuck. I asked her what was up, and she said she'd never paid attention to those kinds of differences in her town before, so she had no way to map it. I told her not to worry about it and got her started on the next activity, figuring that, since she was so thoughtful and engaged already, she would learn from her peers' presentations on the geography of privilege.
After hearing about geographies of water and privilege, we asked for volunteers to share stories of seeing or experiencing privilege or discrimination. We had a couple women tell powerful stories of being racially profiled by security guards and police, and we encouraged them to think more about these stories to write them the next day.
Wednesday
We started with Ashley telling a story of language discrimination (her grandparents are immigrants from Italy), and then had our students write down their own stories. After writing, a few volunteers shared, talking about experiencing discrimination based on sexuality and race. I was impressed how comfortable they seemed to feel talking about those issues, and there was plenty more to be said, but unfortunately we had to move on.
We did a short presentation on Cochabamba, water privatization, and climate change. Then, after a quick break (during which a few students expressed appreciation for being exposed to all these issues they didn't know about), they got into groups to create their poetry presentations about what should change in the world. We showed them the 3 high school students on Queen Latifah's show performing "Somewhere in America," and then they got to work. Most of the groups seemed pretty excited.
Also
I want to note the other great GALACTIC projects going on, including African storytelling and dancing, music improv, immigration debates, and role-playing difficult situations (from Augusto Boal's Theatre of the Oppressed, I think). I want to try all those things myself.
thanks Alex -- I agree with you - I want to try out all of the innovations that facilitators have created!
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