LREDA Final Report (abridged)

Submitted by Taquiena Boston
Anti-racism Program Associate
Department of Faith in Action
December 14, 2000

 

All our ancestors and all future generations are present in us. Liberation is not an individual matter. As long as the ancestors in us are still suffering, we cannot be happy, and we will transmit their suffering to our children and their children. Now is the time to liberate our ancestors and future generations. It means to free ourselves. If we can take one step freely and happily, touching the Earth mindfully, we can take one hundred. We do it for ourselves and for all previous and future generations. We all arrive at the same time and find peace and happiness together!

Thich Nhat Hanh-"The Long Road Turns to Joy"


LREDA has begun the journey to a destination more imagined than real. Beginnings, particularly in anti-oppression work, can feel chaotic and overwhelming. However, LREDA is taking this journey in community with other UUs who have learned that the path to anti-racism is truly a path made by walking. Working together, learning together, organizing and transforming Unitarian Universalism together, we will arrive at the realization that the long road toward wholeness is a path that turns to joy.

excerpt from the conclusion to this report

 

Introduction

This is the anti-racism process observation report for the Liberal Religious Educators Association (LREDA). The process observation was based on attendance of the LREDA October Board Meeting and Fall Conference, and reading of by-laws, proposed Professional Standards, Good Officers documents, minutes of meetings, newsletters, and brochures. The report contains three sections and a conclusion.

Section One describes the lens used for the process observation, which is the Journey Toward Wholeness (JTW) anti-racism analysis, often referred to simply as "the analysis." The JTW analysis, which is presented in this report in a severely abbreviated form, focuses on systemic and institutional racism and its historical evolution in the United States. The analysis also provides tools for identifying racism in the structural levels of institutions and for assessing an institution's progress in transforming itself into a fully inclusive organization in its identity, structures and practices.

Section Two uses the Structural Levels and the "Continuum" tools from the JTW analysis to examine how LREDA has institutionalized anti-racism in its identity, structures and practices. The five structural levels highlighted in the analysis are (1) Personnel; (2) Policies, Programs and Practices; (3) Constituency; (4) Organizational Structures; and (5) Mission, Purpose and Values. The Continuum is an organizational assessment tool that helps institutions chart their journey through six stages in becoming anti-racist, anti-oppressive, multicultural, and inclusive.

Section Three briefly reflects the discussion of the LREDA Anti-Racism Task Force and Board members who attended the post-Fall Conference meeting in October. (NOTE: A longer version of this section is available with additional questions for reflection and more ideas/recommendations that came out of the group discussion.) Three focus areas guided the Anti-Racism Task Force and Board members' discussion:

(1) People of Color Constituency/ies: Developing accountability structures and relationships with communities of color

(2) Leadership: Internalizing (the application of) the anti-racism analysis as standard operating procedure for the LREDA Board

(3) Membership: Expanding LREDA membership buy-in for (commitment to) antiracism

The conclusion describes lessons LREDA can apply from its history as a resistance and empowerment organization to further institutionalize anti-racism in its identity, structures and practices, and specifies current organizational practices that support anti-oppression work and transformation. It is followed by a list of questions intended to assist leadership in applying the JTW anti-racism analysis to the focus areas in Section Three.

 

Section One: The Journey Toward Wholeness Anti-Racism Analysis (The Lens)

1. Anti-racism is spiritual work and is rooted in Unitarian Universalist principles, values, and historical tradition. The JTW represents Unitarian Universalists' commitment to living our principles and purposes. Our goal of making our community anti-racist, anti-oppressive, multicultural, and inclusive demonstrates our belief in the inherent worth and dignity of all people. Applying anti-racism and other anti-oppression lenses to our structures and standard operating procedures is practicing our responsible search for truth and meaning. Involving and engaging marginalized communities in our decision-making, and following the leadership of those communities, deepens our commitment to the democratic process, enables us to exercise justice, compassion and equity at more profound levels of our community, and shows our recognition of the importance of interdependence in creating the beloved community. Further, anti-racism is consistent with Unitarian Universalism's heretical tradition. We are challengers and questioners of the status quo. We celebrate our role in the vanguard of liberal religious, social and political movements.

2. To make our institutions anti-racist we need a common analysis of what racism is and how it operates systemically. The JTW anti-racism analysis is a "power analysis" that examines systemic and institutional racism. The assumptions upon which the analysis is based are the following:

A. History of racism: To understand racism today, we need to know its history, how it evolved historically, and our own institutions' history in relation to racism (and resistance to racism). The history of racism corresponds to European colonial expansion in Africa, Asia and the Americas in the 15th & 16th centuries. In the United States, racism's history includes early European attempts to subjugate and exploit indigenous peoples and the lands they occupied. Racism was also used to justify the enslavement of Africans, who prior to the "racialization" of slavery, were indentured servants who could earn their way to freedom just as European indentured workers were allowed to do. Other actions that further institutionalized racism in the United States were the annexation of Mexico, the exploitation of Chinese labor by the railroad industry, the court supported exclusion of persons who were not classified as white from obtaining citizenship in the United States, state-enforced Jim Crow laws, and a system of racial apartheid supported by the federal government up until 1954 with the Brown versus the Board of Education decision.

During the Civil Rights Era many laws were passed declaring racist practices illegal. However, the institutions-most of which were created during times of legal segregation and discrimination -- did not change. Lack of enforcement of the laws, intentional attempts to avoid or erode legal mandates, and the entrenchment of institutional practices and structures that undergird racism have allowed racism to persist, becoming more insidious.

Along with the history of racism it is important remember the history of the resistors working against racism who have existed from the beginning. Traditionally the resistors are excluded from the history texts, but they serve as inspiration and models of how to dismantle racism. For example, in 1896 the Supreme Court declared separate but equal constitutional (Plessy versus Ferguson). Two years later the Howard University Law School was established to train attorneys who would fight to overturn the Supreme Court's decision. Several attempts were made and failed before the Brown versus the Board of Education ruling in 1954. What is most important to remember is the persistence and faithfulness of those working against institutionalized racism.

B. Definition of Racism: The JTW analysis defines racism as Race Prejudice + Systemic and Institutional (Misuse/Abuse) of Power. There are three ways racism manifests this power: individual racism, institutional racism, and cultural racism. Individual racism is systemically transmitted through institutions and the larger culture.


Racism has three powers:

Racism's first power is to oppress people of color. This is the most obvious power, and receives the most attention in most analyses of racism.

Racism's second power and its real purpose is to provide privilege (access) and power (control) for white people. Though other factors such as gender, sexual orientation, physical or mental ability, and class may influence the degree of privilege and power a white person has personally, collectively white people receive more benefits of society than people of color.

Racism's third and most insidious power is to destroy people of color and white people based on how it operates to socialize us into race-based identities of racist oppressors and victims. At this level, racism becomes the common enemy of white people and people of color.

3. The goal is to transform our institutions-to make them anti-racist, anti-oppressive, multicultural, and inclusive in their identity, structures and practice. The first step towards transformation is claiming an anti-racist identity. Claiming an anti-racist identity means that an institution has developed a systemic analysis of racism, and becomes conscious of the ways its structures and practices maintain privilege and access primarily for white people. Because most of our institutions were created to serve the needs and interests of white people, institutions must intentionally assume an anti-racist identity and incorporate anti-racism in the organizational mission and purpose as the first step in transformation.

4. Changing institutions requires understanding their structural levels and how these function, and an understanding of the stages through which organizations move to become anti-racist. The JTW Analysis uses a Structural Analysis Chart to identify racist practices and a Continuum to chart organizational transformation.

The five structural levels and some examples of practices and structures that provide evidence of racism are: (Note: We look for evidence of racism and other oppressions based on effects or results, not intent.)

Personnel-people who provide services, implement program, perform organizational functions, control entry (gatekeepers) into the institution. Examples of racism include:
- Inequality in numbers, positions and salary levels
- Ineffective training on racism and race relations
- Inadequate supervision, grievance procedures, or conflict resolution
- Lack of mutual community and trust

Policy/Practice/Programs-the functions that carry out the institution's mission and purpose for the benefit of its constituency. Examples of racism include:
- Policies regarding racism and race relations in personnel, finances, facility use, programs, etc., are absent, inadequate or unenforced
- Programs are not designed to reflect commitments of institution regarding racism and race relations

Constituency-those served by the institution. Note: there may be multiple constituencies. There may also be a discrepancy between the institution's declared constituency and its "real" constituency or those who receive the benefits and services of the institution. Examples of racism include:

- Constituency is not representative of community of color
- People of color not adequately or equally served
- Inadequate communication to constituency on racial issues
- Outreach to new constituency does not reflect commitments of institution regarding racial issues

Organizational Structure-leadership, governance, decision-making; the place from which strategic direction and policies are developed. Examples of racism include:

- Geographic or organizational boundaries that are exclusionary or ineffectively represent people of color
- Anti-racist commitments are not reflected in institutional goals and strategies, resource distribution, or in structures of leadership, power, and accountability

Mission and Purpose-the publicly declared reason for the institution's existence; encompasses the institution's history; includes the identity shaping documents (by-laws, mission statement, etc.) of the institution. Examples of racism include:

- Institution does not have an analysis of racism, or an anti-racist identity and commitment
- The constitution, belief system, mission statement, and other identity documents reflect the institution's inherited white worldview, assumptions, values, and principles.

Levels one and two are primarily concerned with the (most visible) access to the institution. Levels three, four and five correspond to power in the institution. Most institutions focus their anti-racism (or more often multicultural diversity) efforts in the areas of Personnel and Policy/Practice/Programs. However, to make lasting change, anti-racism transformation must penetrate to the deeper levels of institutional power.

The Continuum: Institutions, like individuals, go through developmental stages. The Anti-Racism Continuum defines six stages that correspond to an organization's identity, practice and structures with regard to race (and other identities such as gender, sexual orientation, abilities). These six stages move from Monocultural/Exclusive to Transformed (Anti-Racist, Anti-Oppressive, Multicultural/Inclusive) and correspond to the historical periods of the institution's life. The identity (mission, purpose, history, values) and other structural levels (constituency, organizational structure, personnel, programs, policies) will reflect the organization's movement from one stage to another over time.

Note: Institutions may be in more than one place simultaneously. For example, LREDA's public commitment to become anti-racist and welcoming shows the organizational leadership moving into Stage 4 (Analytical Institution), while the larger membership reflects an institutional identity at Stage 2 (Passive Institution). Note also that institutions cannot skip over stages, nor do they advance automatically from one stage to the next. It is possible to fall backwards.

About 90 percent of today's institutions have made public commitments to multicultural diversity, or the Symbolic Stage (stage 3). At this stage institutions have actively sought people of color and other marginalized groups in personnel and have developed programs that support multicultural diversity. Yet, the institution does not have a systemic analysis of racism, and therefore, continues to serve primarily the needs and interests of a white dominated society, and operates according to white norms. Other signs that an institution is at the Symbolic Stage (sometimes referred to as "racist multiculturalism") is that there is no enforcement of policies with regard to race (or other marginalized identity groups), and the institution does not have an accountability structure with communities of color (or other marginalized communities).

The transition to anti-racist identity and practice requires an identity change, or movement into Stage 4, an Anti-Racist Institution (also referred to as the Analytic Stage). Stage 4 corresponds to the Mission/Purpose of the Structural Levels Chart. Here an institution intentionally claims an anti-racist identity and actively applies an anti-racism analysis to its structures and practices. A commitment to becoming anti-racist requires a commitment to changes in accountability and organizational structures as well. Organizational restructuring corresponds to Continuum Stage 5 (Structural Change) or a Transforming Institution.


Section Two: How has LREDA institutionalized anti-racism in its identity and practice to date?

The above question is answered using the five structure levels and the Continuum, which were explained in Section One. Each heading is followed by an assessment of LREDA's current place on the continuum. Keep in mind that the Continuum is an impressionistic tool, though there are specific evidences that help place organizations in specific stages.


Personnel: Continuum Stage 2: Passive or "Club" Institution

As an organization with few staff, LREDA depends on volunteers to carry out many programs and functions. At present, few religious educators of color serve on volunteer committees. Fall Conference attendance and comments of those who attended indicate that LREDA membership is predominantly white. Current staff is also predominantly white.

The small number of people of color who are LREDA members and who serve on volunteer committees means that people of color will have less access to various leadership and professional opportunities for which LREDA membership and volunteer opportunities provide entry. This includes higher-level staff positions in the UUA's Religious Education Department and other volunteer leadership opportunities in LREDA and the larger UU community.

Efforts to bring more people of color into UU religious education is limited by the fact that LREDA currently does not recruit people into the profession, though this may change soon. In addition, the tendency to focus on religious educators as a marginalized group, which they are, hinders the ability to recognize how LREDA may marginalize peoples of color in its structures and practices.

Programs, Policies, Procedures: Continuum Stage 3: Symbolic Change or Multicultural Institution

This is the area in which LREDA best demonstrates a commitment to anti-racism and where leadership has been most active in incorporating multicultural diversity. Efforts include the Anti-Racism Lending Library, a resource for religious educators; a policy that requires congregations to indicate commitments to anti-racism and anti-homophobia/anti-heterosexism when applying for the grants program; continuing education modules that include anti-racism and anti-oppression curricula; participation of persons of color in the Fahs lecture; regular reporting on the activities of the Anti-Racism Task Force; and inclusion of anti-racism and anti-oppression credentialing units among the proposed Professional Standards. In addition, the Fall Conference included worship resources from diverse religious and cultural traditions.

What is unclear is how anti-racism guides the selection of resource materials, the selection of program participants, development of curricula, and organizational functions such as hiring practices for Good Officers and other current and proposed positions, nominations for leadership, and exposure of Board and other leadership to the anti-racism analysis. Also, absent is a strategy for helping the larger membership understand and implement anti-racism in their congregations. While members who spoke to me indicated an awareness of the importance of multicultural diversity, few were actively involved in programming or in relationship with communities that address the needs and interests of the children and youth of color and multiracial families in their congregations. It is also unclear what role anti-racism plays in the Good Officers recruitment, hiring and training.

Constituency: Continuum Stage 2.5: Moving from Passive/Club to Symbolic/Multicultural

LREDA's current membership is predominantly white. If the emphasis is on serving the needs of existing membership then logically LREDA reflects the interests, culture and norms of its predominantly white constituency. Based on this reality, the challenge is how to incorporate the interests, values and norms of peoples of color, that is to develop practices and structures that are accountable to peoples of color.

Also, LREDA does not have a formal accountability relationship with an organization that represents the interest of peoples of color. This is significant because LREDA makes decisions that influence all religious educators in the UUA. Without the voice and involvement of peoples of color who will feel the impact of LREDA's decisions, there is the risk that policies, programs, and structures may foster exclusivity rather than inclusiveness for religious educators of color.

Establishing "accountability relationships" with peoples of color is a way of involving those "under-represented voices" that Rev. Sharon Thornton described in her Fall Conference presentation in LREDA's institutional transformation. By establishing "accountability relationships" with communities of color, predominantly white institutions begin to develop structures and practices that open access to their institutions, and engage with peoples of color in creating institutional change.
It is also important that the persons representing the under-represented voices (in this case peoples of color) are recognized and designated by community/ies of color to perform this role. In other words, the representative needs to have an accountability to for whom s/he speaks.

Note: The UUA Board of Trustees, General Assembly Planning Committee, and UU Ministers Association, as well as the Thomas Jefferson District JTW Transformation Team, have also struggled with the issue of accountability to peoples of color. These groups, along with the Journey Toward Wholeness Transformation Committee (JTWTC) can serve as resources to LREDA in thinking about options for accountability structures.

Organizational Structure: Continuum Stage 2: Passive/Club Institution

LREDA's leadership (Executive Committee, At-large Board, Nominating Committee) currently reflect the predominantly white membership. Few peoples of color are involved in committees that shape organizational direction with regard to priorities, programming and policies. In addition, it does not appear that anti-racism is part of the "portfolio" of all board members and committees in shaping policy and strategic priorities. Nor is there a procedure for ensuring that new leadership receives the JTW analysis training.

Mission/Purpose/Values: Continuum Stage 3.5: Moving from Symbolic/Multicultural Institution to Identity Change (Analytic)/Anti-Racist Institution

LREDA has been a predominantly white organization for much of its history, though religious educators of color were involved in the organization from its earliest history. In addition, LREDA is a leader among UU affiliate organizations because it is the first to make a public commitment to becoming anti-racist and welcoming. This public position is prominent in LREDA's membership brochure, newsletter, conference literature, and anti-racism task force brochure. However, there is no statement of LREDA's commitment to anti-racism in the by-laws, one of the primary "identity documents" of an organization.

Section Three: How can LREDA deepen its efforts to institutionalize anti-racism in its organizational identity and practice?

Developing an anti-racism identity and practice throughout LREDA will require working at deeper structural levels (constituency, organizational structure, mission/purpose) AND continuing to make changes at the more visible levels (program, policy, practice, personnel) of the organization. During the feedback session in October, members of the board and anti-racism task force divided into smaller groups to reflect on three areas to move anti-racism forward in LREDA. A summary of the small group sharing appears below along with questions and brainstorms/recommendations for each of the three areas: (1) People of Color Constituency/ies, (2) Leadership and (3) Membership.

(1) People of Color Constituency/ies: Developing accountability structures and relationships with communities of color

Note: In establishing accountability with an identity group, it is critical that the persons representing a community be designated by and accountable to the communities they represent. Consider the difference between having a religious educator invited as an individual to represent the constituent group of which s/he is a member and having a religious educator chosen by LREDA to speak for the interests the profession and its practitioners. The representative chosen by LREDA not only has more institutional strength backing her/him but also has a network or community providing counsel and support.

There are several organizations and committees within the UU community that can serve as resources for developing accountability structures that involve and serve Unitarian Universalists of color. The Journey Toward Wholeness Transformation Committee is a multiracial group, appointed by the UUA Board of Trustees, to monitor, assess and evaluate anti-racism efforts of the UUA. The JTWTC is also a resource to UU affiliates engaged in anti-racist transformation.

Diverse Revolutionary UU Multicultural Ministries (DRUUMM) is an organization committed to supporting anti-racism and anti-oppression that exists to represent and serve the interests of UUs of color. Latino/a UU Networking Association (LUUNA) is a multiracial UU affiliate that promotes the inclusion of Latino culture in Unitarian Universalism.

YRUU has established a Youth of Color Advisory Council. JTW District Transformation Teams in the Thomas Jefferson District and Joseph Priestly District, Unitarian Society of New Haven (Hamlin, CT), and the UU Society of Greater Springfield, MA are evolving strategies for involving UUs of color and other communities of color in their anti-racism work.

Questions for reflection:

- How does LREDA build accountability relationships with communities of color?
- Does LREDA have an idea of what an accountability relationship looks like?
- What does it mean to be a person of color serving a white religious education community?

(2) Leadership: Internalizing (the application of) the anti-racism analysis as standard operating procedure for the LREDA Board

Developing internal accountability at the organizational structure (leadership/decision-making) level of an organization is another way of expressing the concept of internalizing or "institutionalizing" the anti-racism analysis. Some ways that other UU leaders, departments, committees, and affiliates have made anti-racism part of their practice is by regularly reviewing the JTW analysis and using it as a tool in decision-making and evaluation. These groups encourage continued education in anti-racism and anti-oppression as well.

Questions for Reflection:

- How can LREDA deepen anti-racism analysis among board members (and membership), including internal accountability structures for anti-racism?
- What kind of internal accountability structure can LREDA create?
- How can the anti-racism lens impact each board portfolio?
- What next steps will institutionalize anti-racism in each portfolio?
- Constituency: To whom are we (the Board) accountable?

(3) Membership: Expanding LREDA membership buy-in for (commitment to) antiracism

Questions for Reflection:

How can LREDA deliver anti-racism education, information to religious educators who don't attend General Assembly or Fall Conference?
How do we overcome the sense of "too big"?
How do we start this conversation ?

Conclusion

While there is much work to be done to fully institutionalize anti-racism in LREDA, encouragement should be taken from what this organization has achieved in empowering religious education as a profession as well as those who serve the profession. Religious educators have always been in the business of transformation because education is a transformative process.

For LREDA, the commitment to become anti-racist and welcoming is consistent with a 50-plus year history of resisting marginalization and empowering persons at the margins of Unitarian Universalism. When UU religious educators began to organize in 1949, they assumed a new role-that of resistors advocating for a marginalized constituency.

From a history of elevating religious education as a profession, and advocating for full recognition of the needs and interests of religious educators, LREDA has developed its own "lens" or power analysis for identifying practices and structures that disempower its constituency. LREDA's experience with sexism, as well as the marginalization of religious professionals, provides the organization with another lens for identifying inequities in power and power relationships. Together, these lenses serve as a common understanding from which to develop strategies for change that advance religious education and its practitioners.

Applying an anti-racism lens, and other anti-oppression lenses, is a deepening of LREDA's already established (or internalized) practice of examining institutional identity, structures and practices for ways they disempower and empower marginalized members of the community. Though initially this may feel like adding another layer of work to an already overloaded volunteer organization, anti-racism is not another task or program. Rather it is internalizing a consciousness that transforms (and eventually informs) how an organization carries out its mission, purpose, programs, and policies to serve varied constituencies. This internalization is also reflected in how the institution structures itself to reflect this transformed consciousness.

There are current organizational practices and culture in LREDA that support anti-racist transformation. Specifically, LREDA members exhibit organizing knowledge and skills in professional planning and conference planning. Your leadership practices a culture of acknowledgement, appreciation and affirmation. Cooperation is valued. People volunteer to assist each other with tasks. New members of the board are mentored by experienced board leaders. In addition, the LREDA Board exercises a practice of self-assessment and accountability regarding organizational priorities by asking each board member what they have done to advance LREDA's three priorities. In the words of board members, LREDA exhibits "self-knowing, self-caring, listening, humor, self-forgiveness, capability."

Finally, the LREDA board sings well together, a demonstration of community building skills and esprit de corps. This last point is important because of the relational nature of anti-racism and all anti-oppression work. The respect for relationship, balanced by an organizational culture that seeks to honor both task and process, provides a solid foundation to support antiracism and institutional change in LREDA.

LREDA has begun the journey to a destination more imagined than real. Beginnings, particularly in anti-oppression work, can feel chaotic and overwhelming. However, LREDA is taking this journey in community with other UUs who have learned that the path to anti-racism is truly a path made by walking. Working together, learning together, organizing and transforming Unitarian Universalism together, we will arrive at the realization that the long road toward wholeness is a path that turns to joy.

 

 


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