Become a Creator today!Start creating today - Share your story with the world!
Start for free
00:00:00
00:00:01
CTRH2023: A Critical Reflection on Our Struggle for a More Just & Loving World w/ Dr. Antonia Darder image

CTRH2023: A Critical Reflection on Our Struggle for a More Just & Loving World w/ Dr. Antonia Darder

E136 ยท Human Restoration Project
Avatar
10 Plays1 year ago

This keynote address was part of Conference to Restore Humanity! 2023: Breaking the Doom-Loop, sponsored by Holistic Think Tank, Cortico & Local Voices Network, Antioch University, Education Evolving & Teacher-Powered Schools, and Unrulr. You can also find a video of the keynote and community Q&A on our YouTube page by searching for Human Restoration Project.

Dr. Darder is an internationally recognized activist-scholar and Professor Emerita at Loyola Marymount University, where for more than a decade she held the Leavey Presidential Endowed Chair of Ethics and Moral Leadership.

She is an American Educational Research Association Fellow, the recipient of the American Educational Research Association Scholars of Color Lifetime Contribution Award, and an award-winning author and editor of more than 20 books in the field.

Guests

Dr Antonia Darder is an internationally recognized activist-scholar and professor. For nearly 40 years, Antonia has worked tirelessly to counter social and material inequalities in schools and society.

Resources

Recommended
Transcript

Introduction to Episode 136 and Restore Humanity 2023

00:00:00
Speaker
Hello and welcome to episode 136 of the Human Restoration Project podcast.
00:00:04
Speaker
My name is Nick Covington.
00:00:06
Speaker
As always, this episode is brought to you by our supporters, three of whom are Patricia Jennings, Zainab Balbaki, and Parvathi Sivaraman.
00:00:14
Speaker
Today's episode is a bit different.
00:00:16
Speaker
It's the opening keynote to our conference to restore humanity 2023, which just wrapped up this week.

Conference Resources and Community Engagement

00:00:23
Speaker
In a second, you'll hear Chris introducing Dr. Antonia Darter, an incredible activist, educator, and overall awesome human being who joined us to promote a pedagogy of love.
00:00:33
Speaker
And because of our fantastic sponsors, attendees, and donors, we'll be releasing most of the conference keynotes, events, and track resources under a Creative Commons license over the next month.
00:00:44
Speaker
So be sure to follow HRP on all the socials at HumRezPro and consider supporting us at humanrestorationproject.org.
00:00:52
Speaker
Thanks so much.
00:00:58
Speaker
Hello and welcome to our first video keynote for Conference to Restore Humanity 2023.
00:01:02
Speaker
As a reminder, this is a flipped keynote address with a video recording of the keynote itself, followed by an extensive live Q&A session on July 24th at 11 a.m.
00:01:11
Speaker
Eastern.
00:01:12
Speaker
We hope to see you there.
00:01:13
Speaker
Before we dive into Dr. Antonia Darter's address, I want to take a moment and thank the sponsors of this event, Holistic Think Tank, Cortico, Antioch University, Education Evolving with Teacher-Powered Schools, UnRuler, and our gracious donors at Human Restoration Project.
00:01:27
Speaker
These sponsorships ensure that we can continually host successful events like this, as well as release much of each conference's resources as Creative Commons licensed materials for years to come.
00:01:38
Speaker
More information about our partners can be found in the links below.
00:01:41
Speaker
Finally, please note that you should join our Discord to continue the conversation.
00:01:45
Speaker
Our channel will be open to discuss Dr. Darter's keynote address and engage with other participants.

Introduction to Dr. Antonia Darter and Her Contributions

00:01:50
Speaker
See information on our conference website for more details.
00:01:53
Speaker
Today, I am humbled to introduce Dr. Antonia Darter.
00:01:56
Speaker
Dr. Darter is an internationally recognized activist scholar and professor emerita at Loyola Marymount University, where for more than a decade she held the Levy Presidential Endowed Chair of Ethics and Moral Leadership.
00:02:08
Speaker
She is an American Educational Research Association Fellow, the recipient of the American Educational Research Association Scholars of Color Lifetime Contribution Award, and an award-winning author and editor of more than 20 books in the field.
00:02:20
Speaker
For nearly 40 years, Antonia has worked tirelessly to counter social and material inequalities in schools and society.
00:02:26
Speaker
In the 1990s, she convened the California Consortium of Critical Educators that brought together radical educators to contend with oppressive educational policies related to high-stakes testing and attacks on bilingual education.
00:02:38
Speaker
Her critical scholarship and activism over the years has consistently focused on racism, political economy, and questions of social justice.
00:02:52
Speaker
She has continued the work of Paulo Freire and contributed to our understanding of inequalities in schools and society.
00:02:58
Speaker
Through her decolonizing scholarship on the body, ethics, and methodology, she has contributed to rethinking questions of empowerment and liberation in the lives of oppressed populations.
00:03:06
Speaker
Beyond academia, she is a poet and visual artist.
00:03:09
Speaker
As a distinguished professor of education policy, organization, and leadership at the University of Illinois, she wrote and produced a student community collaborative award-winning documentary, The Pervasiveness of Oppression, which explored the persistence of inequalities within higher education.

Influence of Paulo Freire on Dr. Darter

00:03:24
Speaker
Her lived experience growing up in poverty, her struggles as a single mother, her battles with the academy, and her love of life are essential to her commitment to fighting for a better world.
00:03:33
Speaker
With that, I am excited again to share with you Antonia Darter's keynote, and thank you again for joining.
00:03:41
Speaker
All right, so I'm really happy to be with you today for this really wonderful conference and this event that you have all come to.
00:03:52
Speaker
And I'm thankful to Chris and the Human Restoration Project for inviting me to share my ideas and to be able to be with you today.
00:04:05
Speaker
So I'm going to begin.
00:04:06
Speaker
My piece is a critical reflection on our struggle for a more just and loving world.
00:04:12
Speaker
So I was thinking a lot about this and what I'm going to be presenting, I hope, comes together as that reflection for you.
00:04:20
Speaker
So the spirit that informs my talk is this very heartfelt belief in our capacity to transform our world.
00:04:28
Speaker
Angela Davis' words,
00:04:30
Speaker
You have to act as if it were possible to radically transform the world and do it all the time, can illuminate our path towards a more just and loving world.
00:04:42
Speaker
This similar belief in the power of human beings to transform the world
00:04:47
Speaker
continues to shine in the work of my late mentor, Paulo Freire.
00:04:52
Speaker
A few years before his death, Paulo wrote, I think that it could be said when I am no longer in this world, Paulo Freire was a man who lived, who could not understand life and human existence without love and without the search for knowledge.
00:05:10
Speaker
Freire's view on the significance of love to our pedagogical and personal lives remains steadfast and resounding
00:05:17
Speaker
across the landscape of his writings.
00:05:20
Speaker
He believed deeply from the personal to the pedagogical to the political in the emancipatory and transformative power of love.
00:05:29
Speaker
Freddy's radical articulations of love were grounded in an unwavering faith in human beings to generate the political will necessary to fight against injustice and to remake our world.
00:05:43
Speaker
In Freire's eyes, to fight daily against the forces that dehumanize and undermine our existence without the power of love on our side is like to be lost travelers in a vast desert without enough water for us to complete the journey.
00:06:00
Speaker
Freire often came back to this notion of an armed love, the fighting love of those convinced of the right and the duty to denounce and announce
00:06:11
Speaker
His concept of love is not only meant to comfort or relieve the suffering of the oppressed, but also to awaken within us a historical thirst for justice and a political wherewithal to reinvent our world.
00:06:26
Speaker
Freire's love permeated his existence as a man and an educator.
00:06:31
Speaker
He could be gentle and tender and inspiring while at the same time critical, challenging.
00:06:36
Speaker
strategically unveiling the individual or collective follies he found.
00:06:42
Speaker
Freire's Peragogy of Love challenges the false generosity of those whose ideologies and practices
00:06:49
Speaker
work to sustain a system of education that transgresses at its very core every emancipatory principle of our humanity, every emancipatory principle of social justice and democratic life.
00:07:05
Speaker
It was this lucid recognition of love as an untapped political force of consciousness that most drew me to Paulo Freire's work and continues to fuel my commitment to the emancipatory political project that he championed
00:07:19
Speaker
throughout his life.
00:07:22
Speaker
Understanding then love as a political force is essential, an essential principle of Freire's revolutionary vision of education, a revolutionary vision that I continue to move forward in my work.
00:07:35
Speaker
He recognized that there is an inextricable relationship between love and justice.
00:07:41
Speaker
You can have no justice without love.
00:07:44
Speaker
There is an inseparability in how he theorized the political significance of love in the evolution of consciousness and in the making of meaning.
00:07:54
Speaker
So important was this concept to his pedagogy that Freire unapologetically insisted, I have a right to love and to express my love to the world and to use it as a motivational foundation for struggle.
00:08:08
Speaker
Love here speaks to an intentional and communal act of consciousness that emerges and matures as we live, learn, and labor together as educators, cultural workers, and activists.

Global Economic Disparities and Education Critique

00:08:22
Speaker
As such, Brevi insisted that a politics of love must serve as the underlying force of any political project that requires us to contend daily with the traumas of structural and relational oppression as we simultaneously seek new radical possibilities for social and economic justice.
00:08:43
Speaker
Fredy's politics of love was central to how he defined the revolutionary dynamics between teachers and students, where teachers and students were revolutionary partners in the struggle for a better world.
00:08:56
Speaker
He encouraged teachers to cultivate a great sense of intimacy between self, others, and the world.
00:09:03
Speaker
He argued, as did John Dewey, that creating the conditions for a living democracy must be a central pedagogical concern within the classroom.
00:09:13
Speaker
Here, democracy, along with the solidarity required for its evolution, is made possible through a pedagogy guided by a deep regard for the dignity of all people, no matter their cultural differences or economic circumstances.
00:09:30
Speaker
For Freire, unity does not demand uniformity or assimilation from students or teachers, but rather a vision of education that's founded on a shared political commitment to a more just world.
00:09:44
Speaker
This view of love as a revolutionary force
00:09:47
Speaker
that simultaneously unites and navigates difference is imagined here as a radical sense of lived kinship, the kind of kinship necessary to challenging the material impoverishment and social alienation that are hallmarks of capitalist societies.
00:10:06
Speaker
Recognizing the manner in which so many are left marginalized by the rampant competition of the marketplace, Brady's ideas move us to engender a love born from our shared experience of suffering, of creativity, and of imagination.
00:10:22
Speaker
Experiences that give meaning to our acts of political resistance against the dehumanizing impact of capitalism.
00:10:31
Speaker
We exist today governed by globalized economic apartheid,
00:10:36
Speaker
It doesn't matter what you might think, if we look at what is happening in the world, what we have is globalized economic apartheid.
00:10:44
Speaker
The majority of the world societies are shaped by the law of profit and greed and a precarity fueled by the economic anarchy of the wealthy.
00:10:54
Speaker
According to Oxfam, eight men own more wealth than 3.6 billion people.
00:11:03
Speaker
The richest 1% have more than twice as much wealth as 6.9 billion people, while almost half of humanity survives on $5.50 a day.
00:11:15
Speaker
I don't know about you, but for me, this is staggering, just staggering to think that eight
00:11:21
Speaker
people that ain't men own more wealth than 3.6 billion people.
00:11:26
Speaker
Through our work, we must confront then the greed, lovelessness and immorality of those who perpetuate this economic apartheid through countering common sense myths that the poor will always be with us or that people are poor because of their own doing, right?
00:11:42
Speaker
Like it's their own damn thought that they're poor.
00:11:45
Speaker
Myths of modernity that conveniently camouflage those
00:11:50
Speaker
who are actually responsible for the global poverty and human suffering.
00:11:54
Speaker
So we have all these myths that are created to actually shroud the fact that this gross inequality continues and there is a system of inequality well in place.
00:12:06
Speaker
Over the years, Freyde critiqued the dehumanizing impact of capitalism.
00:12:10
Speaker
He spoke often to the political necessity to unveil authoritarian pedagogies
00:12:16
Speaker
tied to economic apartheid that generates social alienation and a deep sense of estrangement from our bodies for both teachers and students.
00:12:26
Speaker
Alienation, Freire contended, arouses in students' anxieties, insecurities, and the fear of freedom, given the manner in which a sense of disaffiliation towards students' epistemological curiosity and their passion for learning so necessary to their intellectual and political formation.
00:12:47
Speaker
In Perekaji of the Oppressed, Freire noted the historical and systematic disregard for the dignity of students, for the humanity of students, in his critique of the banking approach to education.
00:12:58
Speaker
An approach that on one hand can breed helplessness and disempowerment, and on the other stir forms of resistance that work against students' own interests.
00:13:10
Speaker
Authoritarian approaches to classroom life
00:13:13
Speaker
also keeps students from oppressed communities confused and estranged from one another, generating sentiments of fatalism and inferiority, sentiments that blame students for their academic failure, leaving the repressive practices and structures of capitalist schooling untouched.
00:13:32
Speaker
We find a similar process of alienation in the conditions of labor of teachers who seldom receive adequate resources or genuine opportunities to build meaningful relationships.
00:13:43
Speaker
with their students, parents, or colleagues.
00:13:46
Speaker
Moreover, teachers are often assessed and disciplined in ways that blame them for difficulties that can be directly linked to dehumanizing institutional policies and practices that disrupt possibilities for democratic schooling.

The Role of Emotions in Education and Social Justice

00:14:02
Speaker
My granddaughter, who is a third grade teacher, she's in her second year, and we were having a conversation
00:14:08
Speaker
And she was talking precisely how she was feeling in relationship to her labor in the classroom.
00:14:14
Speaker
She had 32 children.
00:14:17
Speaker
Half of the children were not at grade level.
00:14:20
Speaker
You know, these children were still feeling the impact of COVID and the virtual learning where they learned nothing, really.
00:14:28
Speaker
And she had little support in her classroom, little support to help her deal with the expanded workload
00:14:38
Speaker
that this is causing her.
00:14:43
Speaker
Fredy's view of love then as a motivational force for struggle links the purpose of education to emancipatory values of voice, of social responsibility, of participation and solidarity, which foster democratic life within the classroom and beyond.
00:15:00
Speaker
For Fredy, love must be seen as inseparable to our labor as educators and democratic citizens.
00:15:07
Speaker
In concert with Eric Fromm's
00:15:10
Speaker
notions, Freire embraced the idea that one loves that for which one labors and one labors for that which one loves.
00:15:19
Speaker
This points undeniably to the extent to which Freire himself intimately and passionately loved the world, a significant feature of both his pedagogy and personal way of being, whether with children, students, colleagues, family, friends, or simply the many people who crossed his path each day.
00:15:38
Speaker
Through his life, he resisted the tyranny of binaries in his own philosophical ideas, political interpretations, and pedagogical praxis.
00:15:48
Speaker
Grounded in an enormous sense of responsibility to use his privilege in the interest of the oppressed, but he stressed the importance of practicing respect
00:15:58
Speaker
and patience and faith in our struggles to dismantle the recalcitrant structures of domination that holds the majority of the world's populations slaves to capital.
00:16:12
Speaker
The reason I bring so many of these issues related to Freire and his work is to, in essence, bring together that our struggle has to be linked to who we are.
00:16:24
Speaker
We can't be putting ideas out there and not living them.
00:16:28
Speaker
That lack of coherence actually weakens us in our capacity to struggle for a better world.
00:16:37
Speaker
I wanna turn to this notion that I've been thinking about an epistemology of love.
00:16:42
Speaker
So this epistemology of love is indispensable to an embodied pedagogy for liberation.
00:16:49
Speaker
It signals a way of human knowing shaped by our underlying capacity to love.
00:16:55
Speaker
Another way to put this is that our knowing is directly shaped by our ability
00:16:59
Speaker
or inability to be open to the humanity of others.
00:17:03
Speaker
For instance, Paulo Freire's enormous capacity to love reflected in a affirming way of knowing, one that could embrace a wide spectrum of humanity within himself and others.
00:17:14
Speaker
As such, an epistemology of love supports our capacity for intimacy, which expands our facility
00:17:22
Speaker
to identify or empathize with the core experience of another beyond simply superficial responses or stereotypical distortions.
00:17:34
Speaker
A case in point here, often working class students or activists of color are perceived as being angry.
00:17:40
Speaker
Often this is the way, I can't tell you how many times people have reflected back to me when I've
00:17:47
Speaker
been passionate and struggling, oh, you are so angry.
00:17:51
Speaker
But rather than to acknowledge anger as a logical response to the repeated trauma of oppression, most teachers issue racialized characterizations devoid of insight into the oppressive life conditions and suffering that informs students' anger or frustrations.
00:18:09
Speaker
Similarly, teachers are generally expected to be dispassionate, to repress their feelings and quietly acquiesce to policies
00:18:16
Speaker
and practices that strip them of their humanity without expressing anger for the conditions of their labor.
00:18:23
Speaker
In contrast, Feridi insisted
00:18:26
Speaker
that the kind of education that does not recognize the right to express appropriate anger against injustice, against disloyalty, against the negation of love, against exploitation, and against violence, fails to see the educational role implicit in the expression of these feelings.
00:18:45
Speaker
The right to be angry and the capacity to love can serve us as legitimate motivational forces for social work, social justice work.
00:18:55
Speaker
in that anger aroused by injustice reminds us that we are not meant to live as objects of repression.
00:19:04
Speaker
About this, Freddy asserted, my right to be angry presupposes that the historical experience in which I participate tomorrow is not a given, but a challenge and a problem.
00:19:16
Speaker
to be solved.
00:19:17
Speaker
In light of this, one of the most important tasks of an embodied pedagogy of love is to create the conditions for teachers and students to engage the experiences, the experience of assuming themselves as social, historical, thinking, communicating, transformative, creative beings, dreamers of possibilities capable of being angry because of their capacity to love.
00:19:43
Speaker
This is particularly relevant given that many educators are disconnected from the realities of impoverished communities and too inhibited by their class and racialized biases and misconceptions to see the brilliance that students hold.
00:19:58
Speaker
Instead, students remain objects to be managed, manipulated, and controlled in ways that may eventually draw out of them the prescribed answers, but leave some alienated strangers to their own passion.
00:20:12
Speaker
However, neither teachers, students, or communities are objects to be manipulated or tweaked here or there.
00:20:19
Speaker
Learning, like loving, is an act that students must choose freely to practice through the exercise of their social agency
00:20:27
Speaker
and sense of autonomy.
00:20:29
Speaker
So too, a commitment to social justice is a choice.
00:20:34
Speaker
It's a choice that we each must make.
00:20:36
Speaker
With this at the core of our pedagogical sensibilities, we can dissolve fixed notions of those we see as being so different from ourselves.
00:20:46
Speaker
This is a critical dimension of our work in that given the constant changing nature of our lives, seldom can we know anyone, even ourselves fully.
00:20:56
Speaker
At best, we come to know one another only through our embodied relationships of dialogue, of shared labor and lived experience.
00:21:05
Speaker
In fact, it is precisely the wonderful, unpredictable, unruly, and dynamic processes of relationships that provide us rich terrain for struggle.
00:21:16
Speaker
By cultivating an emancipatory consciousness of solidarity that accepts our human complexities and respects our yearning for freedom.
00:21:26
Speaker
A pedagogy of love overrides conditioned patterns, excuse me, let me say that again.
00:21:34
Speaker
A pedagogy of love overrides conditioned patterns of capitalist schooling by providing a demythologizing context in which we as teachers and students can consider together the political consequences of particular ways of thinking and being in the world.
00:21:51
Speaker
In the process, we must move away from fixed or prescribed notions of life, adopting instead a multidimensional, relational, and contextual view of our humanity.
00:22:03
Speaker
Inherent to this vision is a need for ongoing opportunities for the development of critically conscious cultural citizens prepared to challenge the debilitating impact of racism, of sexism, of transphobia and other inequalities on both our personal and communal well-being.
00:22:22
Speaker
Freire's work urges us to recognize then that social consciousness and material transformation
00:22:31
Speaker
must be seen as this road to be traced out step by step in our organic relationship with the world and in our labor together as educators, activists, and cultural workers.
00:22:42
Speaker
For Freire, conscientization does not take place in abstract beings in the air, but in real men and women and in social structures.
00:22:53
Speaker
It cannot remain on the level of the individual.
00:22:56
Speaker
That was his quote.
00:22:58
Speaker
The last phrase is key, that sense that we cannot remain at the level of the individual, both ontologically and epistemologically, in that it turns the Western obsession with the individual on its head.
00:23:12
Speaker
Yet the truth be told, there is no such thing as an individual.
00:23:16
Speaker
All human beings are formed within the material conditions and communal relations of the cultural context that conditioned our developments.
00:23:25
Speaker
To think of ourselves otherwise is an illusion, an illusion that has served the ravages of capital.
00:23:32
Speaker
Our political work for social change begins seriously at the very moment when we become both critically aware and intolerant of the oppressive conditioning that obstructs our ability to be in community and obstructs our freedom.
00:23:48
Speaker
This process of conscientization is in fact most uplifting when individuals and communities undergo collectively experiences of breakthroughs and decide to forge another path despite the risks or an uncertain future.
00:24:05
Speaker
Noteworthy is Freire's definition of conscientization as a communal process that's fueled by dialogue in that it is
00:24:14
Speaker
that it neurologically primes epistemological ground for activation of curiosity and imagination in the mind.
00:24:22
Speaker
Building consciousness is then a decolonizing road we must forge if we are to deepen our critical awareness and challenge at the root social and material conditions that betray our revolutionary dreams.
00:24:37
Speaker
Frey's concept of conscientization as unfinished is useful here.
00:24:42
Speaker
as we grapple with what can often feel like the immovable force of oppressive policies and practices.
00:24:50
Speaker
Yet, Freire argued that it is precisely because of our unfinishedness that a socially just world is possible.
00:24:58
Speaker
For if this world were a created, finished world, it would no longer be susceptible to transformation.
00:25:04
Speaker
Freire's

Revolutionary Presence and Social Change

00:25:05
Speaker
pedagogy of love begins then with a call for both disruption and openness, starting wherever we are at with faith in our creativity and resourcefulness, as well as our capacity to reflect, to voice, and to be responsive to the challenges that arise in our lives.
00:25:25
Speaker
Freire, however, argued that social consciousness does not occur automatically, nor is it a linear phenomenon.
00:25:32
Speaker
Instead, it arises through an organic process of human connection where pedagogical interactions intentionally nurture intimate connections between people and their world.
00:25:45
Speaker
Here, the individual and community are inseparable.
00:25:48
Speaker
This collective principle is essential to embodying
00:25:52
Speaker
our work for liberation, in that neither dialogue nor consciousness can be generated in the absence of others.
00:26:00
Speaker
It is not a solo enterprise.
00:26:02
Speaker
We are not lone rangers here.
00:26:04
Speaker
Of this way, he argued, we cannot liberate others.
00:26:08
Speaker
People cannot liberate themselves alone because people liberate themselves in communion, mediated by the reality which they must transform.
00:26:18
Speaker
Moreover, an underlying revolutionary intention is vital to building consciousness, as well as our mobilization and organization for the defense of rights and for laying claim to justice.
00:26:31
Speaker
Without embodying a grounded political intent, the necessary level of resistance and revolutionary presence required for substantive institutional change is impossible, leaving us to participate endlessly in this exercise of moving the furniture from here to there, but leaving the basic structure of the room unchanged.
00:26:54
Speaker
I want to look for a moment at the relationship between what I call revolutionary presence and resistance.
00:27:01
Speaker
Revolutionary presence as embodied practices enlivens classrooms and community dialogues.
00:27:07
Speaker
As such, it is essential in navigating both resistance to change and resistance to domination.
00:27:13
Speaker
In contexts where there is resistance to change, we must bring a sense of presence to our efforts to critically interrogate patterns of privilege
00:27:23
Speaker
and to nurture our capacities to engage with the epistemic disruptions that are necessary if we are to change the world.
00:27:32
Speaker
Useful here is Freire's understanding of conscientization, again, or conscientization, by which we become more critically aware that our active collective involvement in the historical process is directly tied to our willingness to denounce injustice and announce a more just and loving world.
00:27:53
Speaker
Further revolutionary presence assists us to navigate the resistance to domination vital to the formation of political consciousness that emerges when students and communities name, challenge and act to counter policies and practices that threaten their dignity and freedom to be.
00:28:13
Speaker
It is worth noting again that repressive policies and practices generally seek to limit the freedom
00:28:21
Speaker
to say yes or no without retaliation, the freedom of physical movement, the freedom to participate creatively, and the freedom of sexual expression.
00:28:34
Speaker
Therefore, it's not surprising that collective resistance rises when such freedoms are denied.
00:28:41
Speaker
Those are part of our human needs to be able to express our humanity.
00:28:45
Speaker
This also points to why resistance is a necessary precursor to revolutionary struggle.
00:28:51
Speaker
The politics of love enters here again, given its role as a powerful force for social resistance and for structural and revolutionary change.
00:29:00
Speaker
With this in mind, revolutionary presence can reinvigorate classrooms and community dialogues in ways that can support teachers and students and communities to grapple more intentionally in fighting the good fight.
00:29:14
Speaker
In the struggle for this transformation of schools and universities and society, we must contend with what is occurring within the world, both locally and globally.
00:29:25
Speaker
But similarly, we must also acknowledge that the chaos in the world is connected to the chaos in our own minds.
00:29:32
Speaker
We are affected by the madness in the world.
00:29:35
Speaker
We can't pretend that it isn't having an impact on how we feel about ourselves and how we're able to express our humanity in the world.
00:29:44
Speaker
By accepting radical responsibility for our participation and relationships with others, we move beyond a focus on merely individual issues and instead labor collectively within and across communities to contend with the underlying roots of capitalist exploitation, suffocating the life out of all of us.
00:30:07
Speaker
However, as Bell Hooks reminds us, to do so requires that we transgress, transgress traditional linear binary and cause and effect thinking so that we might access the power of becoming revolutionary visionaries and actors in the world.
00:30:24
Speaker
This understanding
00:30:26
Speaker
of a politics of decolonization and a politics of liberation will not allow us to lose sight that all life is organic, interdependent, and ever-changing, and that our struggles must be consistently expressed through living and breathing ideas, ideas born of cultural histories of survival and the contemporary conditions of everyday life.
00:30:51
Speaker
To fight the good fight, we must build together creative structures of community that place the majority of our energy and focus on what it is we want to create, rather than just putting band-aids on the same old problems.
00:31:05
Speaker
This does not suggest we ignore existing problems, but that we must struggle together to step out the limitations of the logic and structures that created the problems in the first place.
00:31:17
Speaker
Remaining focused on the old problems curtails our creativity and keeps us stuck in oppressive market-driven paradigms of false generosity, tied to conserving capitalist profit and accumulation.
00:31:29
Speaker
To counter the death grip of capitalism, because that's how I see it, we are in a death grip.
00:31:35
Speaker
We...
00:31:36
Speaker
not only need new tools, we need living tools with the fluidity to shift and change as necessary in the interest of our collective well-being.
00:31:47
Speaker
Fighting the good fight demands that we do our work and live our lives differently if we are to actualize social and material change in the conditions faced by teachers and students and their communities.
00:32:01
Speaker
This calls us to undergo a revolutionary process of redefining ourselves as individuals and collective beings, a process I have experienced in my life and witnessed with my students and comrades.
00:32:14
Speaker
When we come to this place where we recognize that it is not just about ourselves as sole individuals, that we are always connected to the people who are in our lives.
00:32:25
Speaker
and beyond.
00:32:26
Speaker
This process entails some key principles I draw loosely here from Firestone's book, Wounds to Wisdom.
00:32:35
Speaker
She speaks about six principles that are important.
00:32:39
Speaker
That we have to face openly and honestly our historical positionality by telling the silent stories of our collective suffering.
00:32:48
Speaker
That we have to harness the power of our suffering through developing an intimate understanding of our vulnerabilities and how these impact our capacity for connection and solidarity.
00:32:59
Speaker
We need to build together new communities of struggle by opening ourselves to the unknown, embracing our unfinishedness, and entering into supportive and loving relationships of struggle.
00:33:12
Speaker
We must overcome our tendencies to blame, scapegoat, or dehumanize, generally rooted in feelings of helplessness.
00:33:21
Speaker
We need to fight against helplessness by calling for the kind of change that will halt the violence, the poverty, the surveillance, and the legacy of inhumanity that corrupts our existence.
00:33:33
Speaker
We have to disidentify from our sense of victimhood and powerlessness, leaving behind the lies of submission and subordination, and working with others to redefine our place as empowered subjects of our own destinies.
00:33:47
Speaker
We must take personal and collective action in the world that supports a vision of shared liberation.
00:33:54
Speaker
We must come to see that oppression is not immutable.
00:33:58
Speaker
We together have a choice about the outcome of the stories that are unfolding in our time.
00:34:04
Speaker
This is what it means to be empowered subjects of history.
00:34:08
Speaker
There is no question that we must find the courage to speak the unspoken, to seek the unknown, and to move through unchartered waters ever vigilant of our actions and their consequences upon others in the world.
00:34:23
Speaker
This way of life requires a sustained commitment to move beyond sentimentalism and individualistic gestures so that we might risk an act of love and enter into sustaining and nurturing political relationships of dialogue and solidarity.
00:34:41
Speaker
Communal relationships
00:34:43
Speaker
grounded upon our unwavering fidelity to break out of the domesticating and oppressive conditions that trick us into complicity with deceitful promises of an economic system indifferent to people's suffering.
00:34:58
Speaker
Freire's revolutionary vision of education for liberation continues to inspire and awaken hope in liberatory educators, cultural workers, and activists around the world.
00:35:09
Speaker
For many of us from working and from poor and working class communities, the option of struggle has never been a matter of choice, but rather political necessity.
00:35:21
Speaker
If we are to be free to express our self-determination and ensure our right to exist, if we are to have the right to express the sensibilities of our own humanity,
00:35:35
Speaker
Let us refuse then to justify and rationalize the poverty and suffering so blatantly present all around us.
00:35:43
Speaker
Let us challenge the pathetic politics of reform as we struggle to come to terms with this truth.
00:35:49
Speaker
Educational equality or social justice will never be ours within a political economic system that requires the impoverishment and political subjugation of the majority of the world's population.
00:36:04
Speaker
We must know down to our bones, however, that another way of life is indeed possible.
00:36:11
Speaker
It is not our destiny or that of our children or grandchildren to continue living this alienating nightmare of capital.
00:36:19
Speaker
Rather, we are here to live meaningful, creative lives in the interest of our collective well-being and our liberation.
00:36:27
Speaker
Our struggles must encompass a life-affirming vision that places the needs of the people and the planet at the center of our political and pedagogical discourses.
00:36:38
Speaker
But more importantly, these values must be materially reflected in the everyday actions that shape our social, pedagogical, political, and economic interventions in the world.
00:36:50
Speaker
There is no doubt that we need new forms of social and material relationships in the world where an embodied pedagogy of love constitutes a lifeline for our future.
00:37:01
Speaker
And all this requires our personal and collective willingness to step out courageously to embrace our vulnerability and to embody intimate ways of being and knowing grounded in a revolutionary vision of societal reinvention
00:37:17
Speaker
and an ethics of liberation that disrupts the twisted colonizing logic of capitalism, unveils myths that breed exclusion and suffering while all along posing new questions, considering new solutions and seeking liberatory forms of cultural, political and economic life.
00:37:38
Speaker
Of course, none of this is as easy as writing a book or giving a speech, nor can we fight the good fight in isolation
00:37:46
Speaker
I confess that living by these principles can be grueling and an arduous process.
00:37:53
Speaker
It can take our entire lifetime to glean its wisdom, to recapture our social agency, and to step into the power of the human creative force that is generated when our hearts, bodies, minds, and spirits commingle in the pursuit of a more just and loving world.
00:38:12
Speaker
But I can also affirm
00:38:14
Speaker
It truly is a meaningful and passionate way to live our lives, to love, to work, and to dream of those unimaginable possibilities that can set us free.
00:38:25
Speaker
Thank you.

Conclusion and Call to Action

00:38:29
Speaker
Thank you again for listening to Human Restoration Projects Podcast.
00:38:32
Speaker
I hope this conversation leaves you inspired and ready to push the progressive envelope of education.
00:38:36
Speaker
You can learn more about progressive education, support our cause, and stay tuned to this podcast and other updates on our website at humanrestorationproject.org.