Facilitated by Mariame Kaba, this workshop invites participants to reflect on how liberatory education and Black studies contribute to community building and help shape our shared futures. It will unfold in two parts.
In the first part, participants will collaborate to create a short lesson for young people that encourages critical thinking about criminalization. By the end, everyone will have a practical activity they can bring back and facilitate in their own communities.
In the second part, participants will engage in storytelling to explore education for liberation and the ways it has influenced their lives.
Attendees are encouraged to bring a photo or object that represents something meaningful in shaping their understanding of Black history or Black studies. The facilitator will invite participants to share the significance of their item, using storytelling as a way to highlight the importance of liberatory education.
This program is co-organized with
Sojourners for Justice Press (SJP), an abolitionist feminist micro-press behind the Black Zine Fair in New York City. Founded by
Mariame Kaba and co-directed with
Neta Bomani, SJP publishes short-form print—zines, pamphlets, chapbooks, broadsides, and other DIY publications—by people working within the margins of independent publishing.
Photo: Kedrick Walker