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91猫先生鈥檚 Engage! Conference Centers on聽Transformative Justice, Restorative Practices, and Antiracism

On February 21, the 91猫先生 campus community gathered in Emily Dickinson Hall for Mother Tongue, a 90-minute original multilingual theater production created by the , a group based in Springfield, Massachusetts. The performance, which opened the two-day Engage! Conference, was presented by young adults who identify as first-generation students, many of whom may be the first in their family to grow up in the United States, the first to speak English, and many other firsts. The piece was inspired by events and family stories from the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Tanzania, Bhutan, Nepal, South Sudan, and, in this country, Holyoke, and Springfield. In addition to movement and dance, it incorporated music and text in Arabic, Swahili, Nepali, and English.

Day two began with dozens of students, faculty members, and staff gathering in Franklin Patterson Hall to hear keynote speaker Mia Mingus address the topics of transformative justice (TJ), restorative practices, and antiracism through themes of accountability, courage, and collective work. 鈥淢aybe we could have a weeklong keynote,鈥 Mingus joked as she greeted the attendees via video. 鈥淭here鈥檚 a lot to discuss.鈥澛

Founder of , Mingus has been involved in TJ work for almost two decades. She has dedicated her life to supporting and educating communities on ways to address harm, violence, and abuse.

鈥淭J is a racial justice practice. It鈥檚 a liberatory response to the systems that disproportionally target communities of color,鈥 Mingus said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e not just talking about harm in a vacuum. These situations happen because of the conditions that are in place 鈥 patriarchy, colonization, fear, shame, and systems of oppression. There鈥檚 no ending one without ending them all.鈥

In response to this question from a student, 鈥淗ow do you move forward and maintain hope when there鈥檚 so much harm in the world?鈥 Mingus answered, 鈥淎sk yourself 鈥榃hat is the work I鈥檓 doing that is moving something forward?鈥 This work takes courage and hope, but it builds hope, too. I work with survivors every day. It gives me hope because they鈥檙e turning to TJ, they鈥檙e choosing TJ over revenge and punishment. They鈥檙e choosing to do that because they鈥檙e moving from a place of what they desire, not just a place of what they鈥檙e against.鈥

Mingus ended her address with a quote from the author and activist Alice Walker, 鈥淟ook closely at the present you are constructing: it should look like the future you are dreaming.鈥

Following the keynote, the campus community was welcomed to join external community partners. Representatives from Amherst鈥檚 Community Responders for Equity, Safety & Service, Amherst College鈥檚 Center for Restorative Practices, and Amherst Regional High School鈥檚 Restorative Practices were invited to give presentations, participate in break-out discussions, and share resources.聽

The Engage! Conference was made possible with support from the following College organizations and departments: Community Commons, the Cultural Center, the Department of Transformative Justice and Antiracism, the Queer Community Alliance Center, Spiritual Life, 91猫先生 Theater, and the Office of Community Advocacy and Restorative Practices.聽

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