Making Space for Grief in Organizing: Tending to the needs of youth organizers

“Aware of our collective burnout and disillusionment, we decided to pivot towards each other and ourselves ”

-Cyrah Dardas 

Centering Care in Activism: 

Older folks look to young people to change the future but aren't holding space for them to cope, process and decompress from the taxing nature of organizing.  While our previous 482Forward partnerships focused on activating research through art, the overwhelm, exhaustion and trauma experienced over the last two years demanded prioritizing a more living and breathing response to the plight they were facing. At the start of summer, Lead Teaching Artist Cryah Dardas and the young people named the burn out they were enduring from organizing and seeing no change while adjusting to the ever changing transitions of COVID schooling. After naming the burn out they decided to turn towards one another. Cyrah, joined by guest teaching artist saylem celeste, focused on pouring into the young people in the way they have selflessly poured into their communities by carefully creating space to process and curating special care kits for the youth organizers.

Communal recharge through care kits and art making: 

The assembling of the care kits itself was a communal effort. Groups such as Earthkin Herbal, Flower Press and 313 Liberation Zone contributed essential care items to the kits. Each kit included herbal tinctures and tea blends, manifestation cards, zines, and stickers and coloring books for the revolution. This kit was then woven together with beautiful hand dyed fabrics dyed with naturally handmade dyes with materials graciously gifted by Arts & Scraps. What makes this project so special is it fostered exactly what Cyrah sensed the young people really required, community. From the building of the kits, to gifting of them and their impact, this year's project fostered communal support while still providing the artistic space to heal and explore. The youth were able to reshape the way they engage with their activism and reframe organizer culture by pouring into themselves while engaging in activism efforts.

The gifting on the care kits included a communal dinner and of course a reflective art making offering. Over nourishing food and art making, youth enjoyed space to connect as humans, in person- something that has been dearly missing. By recognizing and tending to the youth organizers' need to decompress they pushed back on urgency culture. It nurtured those who needed it the most and provided them with the community and connection they’ve been deprived of over the last two years due to COVID. This year was a practice in ‘being the change we want to see” in our schools not only advocating for the healthy and healing schools youth deserve.

INTRODUCING PIE MEDIA LAB: AN OPEN STUDIO FOR DETROIT YOUTH

PIE is thrilled to announce PIE Media Lab: an open studio space to explore and cultivate imagination through fiber arts and media making as a tool for personal and collective liberation.

This offering will occur weekly on Thursdays from 4-6 at 487 West Alexandrine St. from March-June.

What to Expect: 

A youth-centered place to explore art and media making with Detroit-based Teaching Artists Cyrah Dardas and saylem celeste. Special guest teaching artists will come monthly to teach and mentor on specific mediums. Given our current context, we are prioritizing care, mentorship and deep connection- it will be a place to come together and explore freely while getting guidance from experienced artists. Attend as much as you are able. Pre-register here. Intended outcomes include:

  • Relationship building ( with self, with land, with non human kin + with other artists)

  • Learning about place and the life/ resources / materials that can be explored through a place-based fiber arts practice

  • Learning media making skills through play by giving access to tools (i.e. iPads, cameras etc.) and skilled media artist instruction 

  • Play + experimentation as a means to foster + protect imagination

  • Safety, well-being and healing of all participants

FOR WHO? 

Detroit youth ages 13-17- All are welcome! Those with an interest in media, art, art-based healing and liberation are encourage to join.

WHEN? 

Thursdays from 4-6pm from March to June 2022

saylem making care kits for youth organizers

  • March 10 

  • March 17 

  • March 24 

  • April 7

  • April 14 

  • April 21

  • April 28

  • May 5

  • May 12 

  • May 19 

  • May 26 

  • June 2

WHERE?

487 West Alexandrine St. Detroit, MI .

Thank you to the Chalfonte House and Gallery for hosting us.

Safety: 

This program will take place in-person. To keep all youth and adults safe will be in following this COVID Guidelines: 

  • Adult teaching artists will need a negative COVID test on program days 

  • Adult teaching artists will be vaccinated against COVID-19 

  • All participants will wear and be provided N95 masks 

  • All youth will be screened for symptoms, anyone exhibiting symptoms will not be allowed to attend programming

  • We will incorporate programming outside in the spring as possible 

  • Each session will have a max of 10 students given the capacity of the space

Introducing: Radical Wellness for Education Leaders

APPLY NOW:

Radical Wellness for Education Leaders

We are pleased to announce a new training space: Radical Wellness for Education Leaders*.  This is a transformative and healing space for education leaders that supports their development of more human-centered workplaces and lives. We will be exploring questions like: What does radical wellness mean for education spaces? And what can leaders do to support healing and wellness? Apply now to join our inaugural cohort of Detroit-based educational leaders to deepen your leadership practice at the intersection of individual and collective wellness. 

*Education Leader = Anyone in traditional (i.e. schools) or nontraditional (i.e. afterschool/youth development) education spaces that hold a leadership or administrative position (i.e. principal, dean, Manager, Director etc.) 

Complete this short application by November 12, 2021. 

Details: 

What to expect: 

  • Support for those in leadership roles to embrace humanizing and transformational practices in their schools/organizations and their own lives

  • Increase the resilience of educators, lowering rates of burnout 

  • Deep relationships that will support leaders throughout their career 

  • Explore the intersection of power, leadership, and systemic change at the individual and institutional levels

  • Support the implementation of a policy, practice or structure that sustains a wellness-centered culture

Commitment and Dates: 

This is an eight month long program from December 2021-June 2022 with monthly meetings (see dates below) in addition to offline readings, reflections and one-one conversations. The majority of meetings will be virtual with potential in-person sessions planned for the spring. Participants will receive a generous stipend and individual coaching sessions. 

Who should apply: 

We are seeking participants that identify as education leaders in the city of Detroit. We define education leaders as anyone in traditional (i.e. schools) or nontraditional (i.e. afterschool/youth development) education spaces that hold a leadership or administrative position (i.e. Principal, Dean, Manager, Director etc.). Applicants should be interested in reflecting on their leadership, reimagining what wellness means and shifting conditions in their education spaces to be more humanizing. If you have any questions, please reach out at pie@alliedmedia.org.  

APPLY HERE BY Nov 12!!

Live Session Program Dates:

  • December 4, 2021: 12:00-3:00pm (zoom)

  • December 5, 2021: 12:00-3:00pm (zoom)

  • January 16, 2022: 1:00-3:00 pm (zoom)

  • February  20, 2022: 1:00- 3:00 pm (zoom)

  • March 20, 2022: 10:00am-4:00pm (in person)

  • April 10,  2022: 1:00- 3:00 pm (zoom)

  • May 15, 2022: 1:00- 3:00 pm (zoom)

  • June 5, 2022: 11:00am-2:00pm (in person)