Fellowship Program – Cohort 1
Introduction
The BIPOC Youth Justice and Healing Fellowship will train and support a cohort of emerging leaders — BIPOC youth spiritual activists — in their aspirations and community-building work.
Fellows will gain the skills necessary to dismantle structures of racial and social inequity and build structures of equity in the domains of their choosing. The foundational practice of mindfulness and healing will undergird the training of six BIPOC youth and young adults.
The fellowship is organized as a two-year-long training and mentoring program led by BIPOC core teachers, Kaira Jewel Lingo and Marisela Gomez.
The Beginning
We take inspiration from the work of our teacher, Zen Master Thich Nhat Hanh, who during the Vietnam War gathered activists for regular periods of mindfulness practice to renew themselves individually and as a beloved community as they helped communities rebuild in the face of untold suffering.
We also take inspiration from various BIPOC-led movements that have addressed systemic racial and social inequity, like the Civil Rights Movement, Black Feminist Movement, Farm Workers Movement, Housing Affordability, Land Liberation (including Standing Rock), BIPOC Mindfulness, and others.
Our Impact
The communities served will be low-income and communities of color, people who because of their identities, locations or both suffer the daily manifestations of structural barriers to their health and flourishing. The core community will be the fellows, young spiritual activists of color, along with the core teachers, coaches, and expert consultants–some of whom will be members of the impacted communities.
With guidance, the fellows will select the issues and communities that will be the locus of their broader work. Examples may include communities adversely impacted by housing instability and gentrification, labor exploitation, segregated transportation and recreation, health disparities, climate change, and environmental injustice, mass incarceration, voting rights or groups targeted because of race, sexual orientation, immigrant status, gender identity or physical ability.
First year of training will:
- offer mindfulness practices to strengthen participants’ capacity to face the injustice and suffering in their communities
- offer spiritual mentoring and coaching, peer-support, and access to expert guidance
- develop the practical skills to design a project that combines mindfulness and social justice in low-income communities of color, utilizing best practices from the fields of community organizing, spiritual and political activism, and social entrepreneurship in various sectors (housing, health, education, environment, transportation, recreation, employment, etc)
- offer fellows a $1000 grant to participate in the activities of the fellowship plus a $500 grant for individualized outside training
Second year of training will:
- continue spiritual mentoring and coaching, peer-support, and access to expert guidance
- offer fellows a $1000 grant to participate in the activities of the fellowship
- offer fellows a $2500 grant to run their project
This project will build political, economic, spiritual and cultural power for BIPOC communities in three ways:
By nurturing and supporting a core group of young BIPOC and encouraging them in their community organizing grounded in a spiritual practice and compassionate perspective.
Through coalition building and strategic action, the inaugural fellows will launch or enhance projects that directly address inequalities and promote healing and equity on many levels in communities of color.
What we learn in the two years will be applied to offering future two-year training fellowships to build out a sustainable process of social change grounded in love.
Many activists these days are, understandably, challenged not to give in to despair or anger in the face of multiple and ongoing injustices. A core group of committed, strategic, and compassionate activists can influence many of their peers and model the steadiness and compassion from which transformative action can arise.
Our intention is that this cohort will provide mentorship for subsequent cohorts to continue to build compassionate communities able to resist injustice and build from a place of love. We believe in the intergenerational transmission of strength, resilience, and leadership as a path toward remediating trauma