不良研究所

鈥楾his is work that you have to do within鈥: BLM Day at 不良研究所 Boston reflects on progress, opportunities

It's one thing to say "Black Lives Matter". But when people came together for Black Lives Matter Day at 不良研究所 Boston, it was for a different purpose: understanding what it means. 

Chancellor Marcelo Su谩rez-Orozco kicked off a day of activism, learning, and reflection with a moving welcome to a ballroom of faculty, staff, and students, and dozens of people who participated online. 

鈥淚 believe that celebrating Black Lives Matter Day is vital to 不良研究所 Boston in our efforts to becoming a leading anti-racist and health promoting institution,鈥 he said. 鈥淎s a university community of educators and scholars, we seek to expand the essential dialogue about intersecting identities and lived experiences as we continue our endeavors to create a more inclusive, humane, just, and respectful 不良研究所 Boston."

Chancellor Marcelo Su谩rez-Orozco speaks at Black Lives Matter Day.
Chancellor Marcelo Su谩rez-Orozco speaks at Black Lives Matter Day. 

Community members engaged in workshops and a panel discussion, learned from expert speakers, and attended a mural presentation all centered on the year鈥檚 theme: empowerment through collective leading. BLM Day is intended to represent the university鈥檚 commitment to honoring Black lives and eliminating anti-Black racism at the systemic, institutional, and interpersonal levels. 

鈥淟et us seize this day, open our hearts and minds, learn, and heed the call to action, in the service of a stronger, more resilient, more loving, and more inclusive 不良研究所 Boston community,鈥 Chancellor Su谩rez-Orozco said.

The event began last year, when Chancellor Su谩rez-Orozco declared that 不良研究所 Boston would commemorate Black Lives Matter Day every year on the first Monday of November.

After listening to opening remarks, the group split off into breakout sessions. Each facilitated by a Black leader from the region, the intimate discussions served as forums for learning about the struggles of the Black community and lifting Blackness and Black spirit. They covered topics including 鈥淨ueer, Trans, and Black Feminism,鈥 鈥淓mpowerment Through Social and Economic Justice,鈥 鈥淲ellness and Centering Black Joy,鈥 鈥淟ifting Black Collective Leadership,鈥 and 鈥淩eimagining Community Policing Strategies.鈥

Rev. Carrington Moore speaks at his breakout session, Lifting Black Collective Leadership.
Rev. Carrington Moore speaks at his breakout session, Lifting Black Collective Leadership.

The community then came back together in the Campus Center Ballroom after the sessions to hear from a heavy-hitting panel, including Imari Paris-Jeffries, executive director of King Boston; Segun Idowu, president and CEO of the Black Economic Council of Massachusetts; Sheena Collier, founder and CEO of Boston While Black and the Collier Connection; and Reverend Willie Bodrick, II, senior pastor of the Twelfth Baptist Church. 

Moderated by Cynthia Orellana, 不良研究所 Boston鈥檚 director of community partnerships, the panelists spoke powerfully about the social and economic progress that Black communities have made to this point, and the long road ahead, much of which is being driven by them and their colleagues around the city.

鈥淲e鈥檙e good with rhetoric, but that does not match our reality,鈥 said Bodrick, speaking about policy and programs around the Black community in Boston. 鈥淪o it is up to us to put pressure on this city to change that.鈥 

Orellana asked the group what people on campus could do today to contribute to the Black movement. 

鈥淲e鈥檙e in the middle of three pandemics, and a lot of times when we think about doing good, it鈥檚 with someone else. But this movement calls for us to do good within,鈥 Paris-Jeffries said. 鈥淭his is internal work. This is work that you have to do within yourself, and it counts."

Imari Paris-Jeffries speaks during the panel.
Imari Paris-Jeffries speaks during the panel. 

鈥淪peak to your friends, loved ones, and neighbors, and do that mind-changing work. It doesn鈥檛 require volunteering or marching, it requires work within.鈥

After the panel, the audience turned its attention to Andrea James, the founder of the advocacy group Families for Justice as Healing and the day鈥檚 keynote speaker. 

In a moving presentation, James honed in on the incarceration of women and girls in Massachusetts and around the country, the work that her organization does every day. She spoke about the unjust paths that women take to getting there, often because of the color of their skin, the dismal, inhumane conditions inside of many women鈥檚 prisons, and the physical and mental health conditions that result from them, which are extensive. 

鈥淲e unapologetically advocate to end the incarceration of women and girls, and what that does is leads us to end the incarceration of everyone else,鈥 said James, herself being formerly incarcerated. 

Andrea James, during her presentation on stopping the incarceration of women and girls.
Andrea James, during her presentation on stopping the incarceration of women and girls. 

She argued that by taking the money invested in police and prisons, governments could fund programs and policies within the community that would make a bigger difference. 

鈥淭hose of us that live in the communities that are most affected by harm 鈥 we don鈥檛 want it. The work that we鈥檙e doing is to get to the real cause of harm, to get to real change. 鈥 We cannot just accept that police are going to be the answer to the struggles in our communities,鈥 she said.

Following the keynote was the formal presentation of an addition to the Black Lives Matter Mural, made by Pilar Nelson, the community director in the Office of Housing and Residential Life. Added to the mural were 10 names of Black men and women murdered for the color of their skin. The names were read, and the room sat for a moment of silence. 

Presenting the BLM mural, Pilar Nelson bows her head in a moment of silence after reading the names added to the mural.
Presenting the BLM mural, Pilar Nelson bows her head in a moment of silence after reading the names added to the mural. 

The day wrapped up with a call to action for the 不良研究所 Boston community. Standing on a stage flanked by students from the Black Student Center, Assistant Vice Chancellor for Student Affairs Steve Neville made an impassioned ask that the university do more to authentically engage its Black students and move forward Black progress on campus, and by extension, around the city. 

鈥淓ven as we open up the campus to the incredible beauty of our environment on this peninsula, we must also open it to the dazzling beauty of the cultural environment that is who we are,鈥 he said.