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Black History Month for White People

A guest blog by Brooke Baxa, Planned Parenthood for America Digital Organizing Manager

Black History Month should be a time of celebration for everyone. If you’re white and sitting here thinking, “but how can I celebrate Black History Month? This isn’t for me,” I get it.

To be sure, Black history is everyone's history, but has been systemically left out of our history books and mainstream media. Black History Month is a great opportunity to celebrate the Black people in your life, find ways to give back to the Black community, and most importantly to put in work on breaking down the privileges in your own life and to take action to break down the white supremacy around you.

It’s true that Black History month is not about you — that’s a reason to not take up space that isn’t for you, not an excuse to do nothing at all. Maybe you’ve kept quiet because you don’t feel educated enough to say something meaningful, or maybe you’re feeling a sense of guilt. To be frank, though, this is white supremacy in action. Our white guilt will not save Black lives or stop the inequities that exist for communities of color, but our actions can!

And you are not alone in this journey — there are plenty of white folks out in this world taking steps to understand the white privilege in their own lives, how white supremacy shows up at work and at home, and taking active steps towards change and healing. There are tons of resources that exist out there, and a great first step is exploring your options, read and listen to the stories of Black people, find guides for how to show up for racial justice, and give back to Black authors, journalists, business owners, community leaders, and all the people who continue to shape and change the world we live in.

This is certainly not an exhaustive list but if you’re struggling for ways or places to get started on your journey, take a look at some steps below. Happy Black History Month, and cheers to a year of growth and accountability to ourselves, and our communities. Let’s create a legacy of being actively anti-racist and no more white complacency.

Listen and Trust Black Women

From the Me Too movement, to standing up to police violence, to reproductive justice, Black women have always been at the center of this work, rooting the path for justice in healing and community. If you haven’t read up or been tuning into this work, now is a great time to start!

Take to social media and follow SPARK and In Our Own Voice to get a crash course in reproductive justice and hear the stories of Black women who are leading the movement for sexual health and rights in all communities.

NBCBLK put together a collection of stories highlighting Black women who are lifting up their communities today. Black History Month in the present! Check out She Thrives.

Black Storytellers

Speaking truth to power is not new to our work here at Planned Parenthood, nor is it new to social justice movements. Some of the most well known activists have been incredible storytellers. A great place to start in owning your own story is being able to listen and understand others. From articles, to novels, to film, you have an infinite amount of Black storytellers that exists out there. I always like to check out Barack Obama’s favorites list of the year to craft a reading and watch list. For me, the film Moonlight and Patrisse Cullors’ and ashe bandeles’ book When They Call You a Terrorist: A Black Lives Matter Memoir, were two of the biggest stories that impacted me over the last year. Start building your reading list and let us know who your favorite Black storytellers are!

Learn about white supremacy and white privilege

The world is full of research and guides for how to unpack white privilege, but if you’re not sure where to get started, I recommend the classic Unpacking the Invisible Knapsack by Peggy McIntosh. In this reading you’ll explore the structural ways racism exists and see an example of how you can examine daily effects of white privilege.

For a newer read, you may have seen Layla Saad’s Me and White Supremacy workbook. It is a 28 day guide into examining white supremacy in a variety of its forms. It’s a free guide, use the hashtag #MeAndWhiteSupremacy and you’ll find a community of other folks diving into this work, too.

Go Deeper

If you’ve read these resources before, or are looking for more, good! This is just the start for ways you can learn and take part in racial justice work. Share this blog or these resources with your friends and family members, and start a conversation about how white privilege shows up in your everyday life. Then we can start to build a community that holds each other accountable to being better and bolder in standing up against racial injustice.

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Stand With Black Women, This Month and Always

What can get lost in the work Planned Parenthood health centers do to extend care across the country — to people of all income levels, of all educational backgrounds, of all gender expressions, of every race and color — is how much of what Planned Parenthood does, every day, depends on the devotion and contributions of Black women.

Black women work at the heart of this institution. With a breadth of lived experiences, perspectives, and professional backgrounds, Black women provide care at Planned Parenthood health centers and inform how Planned Parenthood speaks and acts to protect and expand access to care.

We want you to meet a few of the Black women who power Planned Parenthood — and to read in their own words how, in the work they do, they stand with Black women every day.

Ambalika Williams

Patient Advocacy Program Manager, Planned Parenthood Federation of America

1. How long have you worked at Planned Parenthood?

I’ve worked with Planned Parenthood for two years.

2. Why did you come to work at PP?

I moved from Texas to D.C. to pursue a career in reproductive health advocacy after watching Texas close over 30 abortion clinics because of HB 2.

3. What does standing with Black women mean to you?

Working towards a movement of reproductive freedom is personally important to me because I have been denied reproductive health care several times because I am a Black lesbian. I believe standing with Black women means actively working toward creating a world where Black women and femmes can thrive and have full control of their destiny.

Nia Martin-Robinson

Director of Black Leadership and Engagement, Planned Parenthood Federation of America

1. What has been your path within Planned Parenthood?

I just celebrated my three-year Planniversary this January. I came to Planned Parenthood in January of 2016 as a Regional Campaign Director and more recently joined the Strategic Partnerships Team as the Director of Black Leadership and Engagement.

2. Why did you come to work at PP?

Planned Parenthood is an essential part of the fight for Reproductive Freedom, but we cannot be successful and fulfill our mission of health care for all or achieve health equity unless we prioritize Black women — the health of Black women, the families of Black women, and the leadership of Black women. I brought my skills and expertise to Planned Parenthood because I wanted to be a part of the legacy of Black women who are fighting to ensure that Black women, girls and femmes are centered in every facet of our work.

3. What does standing with Black women mean to you?

Everyday, our communities are under attack. Our access to sexual and reproductive health care is in jeopardy. We stand with Black women because Black women have been the backbone of social movements in this country for centuries.

We stand with Black women for whom the “choice” in “pro-choice” does not apply, because of restrictive policies — Black women in the rural South, for example, who are hundreds of miles from the nearest health center or hospital, and who too often find their pain ignored and their decisions shamed.

Jamesa Bailey

Manager, Black Organizing Program, Planned Parenthood Federation of America

1. What has been your path within Planned Parenthood?

I have been at Planned Parenthood since July 2016. I first joined the PP team as a coordinator in our Government Relations team and then transitioned to our Organizing and Engagement team as a coordinator for our Constituency Organizing team. In September 2018, I was promoted to the Manager of the Black Organizing Program, a new formal program within the federation, and I am so honored and excited to grow our Black organizing work.

2. Why did you come to work at PP?

I didn’t know anything about Planned Parenthood until I got to college and I trusted Planned Parenthood of Dover, Del., to provide care for me while I was away. I didn’t feel always feel comfortable going to my campus health center, so I was grateful that Planned Parenthood gave me the non-judgmental and affordable health care that I needed. I came to work here to not only repay them for taking such good care of me, but to also educate people, particularly Black women, on all of their sexual and reproductive health care options.

3. What does standing with Black women mean to you?

The word stand is a verb, which means it requires an action. Standing with Black women means more than just wearing the shirt or using the hashtag. Standing with Black women means you see us, our bodies, experiences, and voices and not only do you see those things but you also respect and value them. Standing with Black women requires intentionality, respect, and a strong desire to not just want to give us a seat at the table, but to help create a table for us.

Monica Massamba

Regional Youth and Campus Organizer, Planned Parenthood Federation of America

1. What has been your path within Planned Parenthood?

I joined Planned Parenthood in 2017 as Regional Youth & Campus Organizer in the Organizing, Engagement, & Campaigns Department. I will be celebrating my two-year anniversary this March.

2. Why did you come to work at PP?

I came to work at PP because when I needed to get my own abortion, Planned Parenthood staff supported me in helping me find a local provider and access to the Carolina Abortion Fund. After the 2016 election, I knew that the threat of defunding was real and I wanted to help mobilize young people of color in the fight to protect health care for millions across the country.

3. What does standing with Black women mean to you?

Standing with Black women means believing us when we report an assault. Standing with Black women means trusting our leadership. Standing with Black women means taking our health concerns seriously. Standing with Black women means providing the highest level of healthcare to any of us no matter what.

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Black History Month 2017

Planned Parenthood strives to create a world where sexual and reproductive health care is accessible, affordable, and compassionate — no matter what.

Black women have always championed reproductive freedom and the elimination of racism and sexism as an essential element of the struggle toward civil rights. This Black History Month, Planned Parenthood honors the resilience of Black women like Dr. N. Louise Young and Dr. Thelma Patten Law,  two of the first Black women health care providers at Planned Parenthood — and the resistance of women like Angela Davis who continue to fight for the full dignity, autonomy and the humanity of all women.

In commemoration of Black History Month each year, we lift up and celebrate those who have defied their time and circumstances to become Dream Keepers and freedom fighters. #100YearsStrong of Planned Parenthood could not be possible without the vision, tenacity and determination of those who have kept and protected the dream of reproductive freedom, justice and autonomy.

The 2017 Dream Keepers

Ida B. Wells-Barnett Journalist, Civil Rights Activist

Ida B. Wells-Barnett was the most prominent Black woman journalist of the late 19th and early 20th century. Her research and reporting around the lynching of Black people helped to bring national attention to the crisis and pushed federal legislation to hold mobs accountable.

Marsha P. Johnson Activist, Stonewall Rioter

Marsha P. Johnson, co-founder of the Street Transvestite Action Revolutionaries (STAR), is credited with being one of the first people to resist the police during the Stonewall Riots of 1969. On the commemorative anniversary of the riots in 1970, Johnson led protesters to the Women's Detention Center of New York chanting, "Free our sisters. Free ourselves," which demonstrated early solidarity between LGBTQ rights and anti-prison movements.

Former Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm Black Feminist, Former Presidential Candidate

In 1990, Shirley Chisholm — along with former Planned Parenthood Federation of America president Faye Wattleton, Byllye Avery, Donna Brazile, Dorothy Height, Maxine Waters, and Julianne Malveaux (among others) — formed the group African American Women for Reproductive Freedom to show their support for Roe v. Wade, doing so with what we now call a reproductive -justice framework. The former New York representative was the first African American woman elected to Congress. During her seven terms, Rep. Chisholm pioneered the Congressional Black Caucus and was an unwavering champion for women’s reproductive rights and access to health care, including abortion. In 2015, President Obama awarded Rep. Chisholm with the Presidential Medal of Freedom Award.

Dr. N. Louise Young

Dr. N. Louise Young, a gynecologist and obstetrician, opened her practice in Baltimore in 1932. She later operated a Planned Parenthood health center that was opened with the assistance of the local Urban League and other community partners.

Dr. Thelma Patten Law

Dr. Thelma Patten Law becomes one of the first Black women ob-gyns in Texas. She provided health care for more than 25 years at the Planned Parenthood Houston Health Center, which opened in 1936.

Faye Wattleton Author, Advocate for Reproductive Freedom, Former President of PPFA

In 1978, Wattleton became the youngest individual at the time and the first African American woman to serve as president of the Planned Parenthood Federation of America (PPFA). During Wattleton’s 14--year tenure, PPFA became one of the nation’s largest charitable organizations. Under Wattleton’s leadership, the organization secured federal funding for birth control and prenatal programs; fought against efforts to restrict legal abortions; and, along with reproductive health allies, helped to legalize the sale of abortion pill RU-486 in the United States.

The Coiners of Reproductive Justice

Black women's existence has inherently challenged the "choice vs. life" argument. However the creation and coining of reproductive justice ushered in a new framework where women of color could express all of the ways their sexual and reproductive autonomy is systemically limited.

Dr. Dorothy Roberts Author, Scholar, Professor

Dorothy Roberts is an acclaimed scholar of race, gender and the law. Her books include Fatal Invention: How Science, Politics, and Big Business Re-create Race in the Twenty-first Century (New Press, 2011); Shattered Bonds: The Color of Child Welfare (Basic Books, 2002), and Killing the Black Body: Race, Reproduction, and the Meaning of Liberty (Pantheon, 1997) — all of which have shaped and informed scholarship around reproductive justice.

Monica Roberts Historian, Founder and Editor-In-Chief of TransGriot

Monica Roberts, aka the TransGriot, is a native Houstonian and trailblazing trans community leader. She works diligently at educating and encouraging acceptance of trans people inside and outside the larger African-American community and is an award-winning blogger, history buff, thinker, lecturer and passionate advocate on trans issues.

Dr. Iva Carruthers Past President of Urban Outreach Foundation, General Secretary of the Samuel DeWitt Proctor Conference

Carruthers uses her ministry as a vehicle for addressing social issues, particularly those involving people of African descent both in the United States and abroad. She is past president of the Urban Outreach Foundation, a nonprofit, interdenominational organization that assists African and African-American communities with education, health care, and community development.

Rev. Dr. Alethea Smith-Withers Founder and Pastor; The Pavilion of God, Washington, DC; and Chair of the Board of Directors for Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice

Rev. Smith-Withers has been an active advocate for reproductive justice for many years. She is currently serving as the chair of the board of directors of Religious Coalition for Reproductive Choice (RCRC). She is the founder and pastor of The Pavilion of God, a Baptist Church in DC.  She hosts “Rev UP with Rev. Alethea”, a BlogTalkRadio show.

Rev. Dr. Susan Moore Associate Minister at All Souls Church Unitarian

Dr. Moore’s ministry has focused upon the challenges facing urban America. An HIV/AIDS and teen pregnancy prevention educator and trainer, she has worked with several community and faith-based groups, including the DC Campaign to Prevent Teen Pregnancy, Planned Parenthood, and AIDS Action Foundation. She actively advocates for a national, coordinated AIDS strategy to reduce racial disparities, lower the incidence of infection, increase access to care, and involve all stakeholders.

Bevy Smith CEO and Founder of Dinner with Bevy

A Harlem native and New York fashion fixture, Smith is outspoken about women’s empowerment and social justice. She gives back by connecting and engaging a network of top leaders to promote social change.

Mara Brock Akil Screenwriter and producer and founder of Akil Productions

Mara Brock Akil is the co-creator of hit TV shows Girlfriends, The Game, and Being Mary Jane.  She is a tireless advocate of women’s health and rights.

Tracy Reese American fashion designer

Relentless PPFA supporter, Reese is a board member of the Council of Fashion Designers of America.

Kimberlé W. Crenshaw Scholar, Professor at the UCLA and Columbia Schools of Law

Kimberlé W. Crenshaw is a feminist scholar and writer who coined the term "Intersectionality." Kimberlé  is the co-founder of the African American Policy Forum, which developed seminal research on Black women and girls and the school-to-prison pipeline and policing, including, respectively: "Black Girls Matter: Pushed Out, Overpoliced and Underprotected" and "Say Her Name."

Angela Peoples Co-Director of GetEqual

Serving as the Co-Director of GetEqual, Angela is working to ensure that Black lives and gender justice is a guiding force in LGBTQ work.

Jazmine Walker Reproductive Justice Leader

Jazmine is a big fine woman who specializes in reproductive justice and agricultural economic development.

Her dedication to public scholarship and activism is driven by a passion to amplify feminist and reproductive justice discourse around Black women and girls, especially those in Mississippi and the broader South.

Amandla Stenberg Actress, Author

This Black queer feminist makes us look forward to the next generation of feminist leaders and thinkers.

Her YouTube video, "Don't Cash Crop My Cornrows," clapped-back against the cultural appropriation of Black fashion and style and won our hearts.

Charlene A. Carruthers National Director for Black Youth Project 100

Political organizer Carruthers is building a national network and local teams of young Black activists.  She is committed to racial justice, feminism, and youth leadership development.

Monica Simpson Executive Director of SisterSong National Women of Color Reproductive Justice Collective

At SisterSong National Women of Color Reproductive Justice Collective, Simpson works to amplify and strengthen the collective voices of indigenous women and women of color to ensure reproductive justice through securing human rights. She has organized extensively against the systematic physical and emotional violence inflicted upon the minds, bodies, and spirits of African Americans with an emphasis on African-American women and the African-American LGBT community.

Deon Haywood Executive Director, Women With A Vision, Inc.

Haywood works tirelessly to improve quality of life and health outcomes for marginalized women of color.  Since Hurricane Katrina, Haywood has led Women With a Vision, a New Orleans-based community organization addressing the complex intersection of socio-economic injustices and health disparities.  

Rep. Sheila Jackson Lee Congresswoman, D-TX 18th District

Congresswoman Jackson Lee has been a staunch supporter of Planned Parenthood and women's health.

This year she has become a valuable champion as a member of the House Judiciary Committee, where she was vocal at both hearings displaying a clear understanding of the important role Planned Parenthood health centers play in the communities they serve. She also came to the floor on several occasions and attended a Planned Parenthood’s press conference, lending her voice in the fight against backwards legislation.

Del. Stacey Plaskett Congresswoman, D-US-VI

Delegate Stacey Plaskett became a supporter of Planned Parenthood this year when she spoke out for Planned Parenthood health center patients during a Oversight and Government Reform hearing, where she is a member, commenting that she would like a Planned Parenthood health center in the Virgin Islands.

Del. Eleanor Holmes Norton Congresswoman, D-DC

As a fierce, passionate, Black feminist and reproductive health advocate, Congresswoman Eleanor Holmes Norton has supported Planned Parenthood unwaveringly. She also sponsored the EACH Woman Act and, in 2015, held an event with young women on abortion access.

Rep. Joyce Beatty Congresswoman, D-OH 3rd District

Rep. Beatty has been an active supporter of women's health during her tenure in Congress, cosponsoring legislation, signing onto pro-letters and always voting in the interest of women's health.

Rep. Maxine Waters Congresswoman, D-CA 43rd District

Since arriving in office in 1990, Rep. Waters has voted in the best interest of the health of women and communities of color, making a career of addressing these issues by closing the wealth gap.    

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As we enter our centennial year at Planned Parenthood, Black History Month provides a unique opportunity for us to celebrate and lift up those who have in the past and those who continue to fight at the intersections of racial, gender, reproductive, and LGBTQ justice. We are grateful for their leadership, courage, and tenacity in breaking down barriers and moving us all closer to achieving full equality.

In honor of Black History Month, Planned Parenthood Action Fund celebrates the courageous leadership in the Black community that moves our nation toward a more equal and just society. Planned Parenthood has worked with leaders in the Black community for decades to increase opportunity and provide greater access to health care for all individuals. For the third year, Planned Parenthood will again honor the Dream Keepers -- this year recognizing leaders from the Past, Present, and Future.

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"Reproductive justice, a 20-year-old term coined by women of color, is a vision in which everyone is able to decide if, when, and how to create a family, and that they have the ability to raise their children free from harm and violence." - Renee Bracey Sherman

The series #BlackFutureMonth is currently being produced by Huffpost and this article beautifully navigates the intersections of black bodies and reproductive justice. Join @PPBlackComm for a special Back History Month Tweetchat by following the hashtag #BlackHealthMatters on Wednesday 2/10 at 6 pm.

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Black History Month ‪‎Throwback Thursday‬: Byllye Avery is a fierce activist who has worked tirelessly to improve the lives and health outcomes of black women. In 1983, Avery founded the National Black Women's Health Project (now the Black Women's Health Imperative) to organize and empower black women to own their health, and was one of many leaders in the creation of the Reproductive Justice framework and movement. 

Learn more about her work here.

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[W]e do not live single-issue lives. ... I have to advocate for abortion access and support efforts like ‪#‎BlackLivesMatter‬ because my Blackness and my womanhood are inextricably linked, and I choose all of me. I believe our future depends on all of us bringing our full selves to the fight for freedom, and I believe that Reproductive Justice is the framework that will carry us there.
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Born into slavery, Sojourner Truth was an outspoken slavery abolitionist and suffragist. In 1851, she delivered her famous "Ain’t I a Woman?" speech at the Women’s Rights Convention in Akron, Ohio. In her speech, she challenged the women’s movement to include the experiences of women of color. Today we remember Sojourner for her historical contributions to justice and human rights.

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One of the greatest. 

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