Explore environmental racism; how race, place, and power intersect to determine who breathes clean air, who has safe drinking water, and who bears the burden of pollution and environmental neglect.
Speaker: Rafi Vaca-Tricerri
More: cleanAIREnc Storyboard
Take Action: Emissions Reporting Form
Support: The Carbon Plan
Guide: What Is Environmental Racism?
Bahá’í Statement on the Environment
The mission of the YWCA is the elimination of racism and the empowerment of women? Join us for a fascinating discussion and learn about more ways you can support this work in our community.
Speaker: Pamela Senegal
980.585.0503
psenegal@ywcacentralcarolinas.org
Book: There's No Place for Us
CBS News: Employed but Homeless
Tiffany Garner, MA, MPA, is serving as a Children, Healthcare & Prevention Policy Advocate at Futures Without Violence since March 2022. Previously, Tiffany held the position of Community Violence Initiatives State Manager/Lobbyist with Giffords: Courage to Fight Gun Violence Tiffany's extensive experience also includes roles at the International Association of Chiefs of Police, the Maryland Network Against Domestic Violence, and the Mecklenburg County Women's Commission, focusing on law enforcement training, trauma-informed care, and domestic violence prevention.
Article: 5 Things You Should Know About Gun Violence
Resource: Futures Without Violence
In Power, Ford examines the history of American policing in order to see what its future may hold. The slave patrols created in the 1700s to track down enslaved persons; the often violent police suppression of the Civil Rights movement; and more recent wrongful deaths rhyme in ways that are difficult to ignore within a deeply entrenched framework of violent racial inequity.
Trailer & article by Roxanne Fequiere
Article: National Library of Medicine, Police brutality and racism in America
Podcast: From slave patrols to police brutality – a history of race and the American police
Two groups that are addressing and working to overcoming racism in education are CREED and Down Home North Carolina.
Speaker: Kamille Bostick, CREED
Speaker: Mae@DownHomeNC
Data from the Othering & Belonging Institute
Most Segregated Cities in the US
Podcasts are a way to get inside a topic:
This American Life episodes on resegregation in schools (from 2015)
Episode 562: The Problem We All Live With Part 1
Episode 563: The Problem We All Live With Part 2
CREED has its own podcast series called Deep Rooted
Deep Rooted (podcast Ep. 4) that looks at school desegregation / resegregation in NC [first 12 minutes are where the reading takes place]
Film: Integrating Mississippi's Schools
The Arc & The Wedge evolved from the Wedge and the Crescent, a term originally used to describe Charlotte’s voting patterns. Since then, Wedge and Crescent has been used to describe everything from income, schooling, race, food deserts, and even the COVID infection rate.
Wedge and Crescent identifies two geographic Charlotte regions that have dissimilar demographics.
Down Home North Carolina is building power with poor and working-class people in North Carolina’s small towns and rural communities. ALL ARE WELCOME AT DOWN HOME.
A film directed by Stephanie Welch that examines the history of the eugenics movement in the United States and its perceived resurgence through contemporary genetics. The film argues that the belief in biological determinism—the idea that some groups, races, and individuals are inherently superior and more deserving of rights—has threatened the American Dream since its inception, being used to justify the disenfranchisement of women, Black people, and Native Americans.
Access to 5000+ Resources on Race Unity
Taking Action
18 Strategies Relevant to Racial Equity Work
Podcasts are a way to get inside a topic:
Apple Podcast: Is Eugenics Making A Comeback?
DIG: A History Podcast - Eugenics
YouTube
“We are not alone”: Legacies of Eugenics
North Carolina Eugenics: History and Victim Compensation
Restorative Justice
Restorative Justice is a theory of justice that emphasizes repairing the harm caused by crime and conflict. It places decisions in the hands of those who have been most affected by a wrongdoing, and gives equal concern to the victim, the offender, and the surrounding community. Restorative responses are meant to repair harm, heal broken relationships, and address the underlying reasons for the offense. Restorative Justice emphasizes individual and collective accountability. Crime and conflict generate opportunities to build community and increase grassroots power when restorative practices are employed.
Related Resources: Conflict Transformation and Restorative Justice
Location: ACT / Strategies

No two people have the same lived experience. Learning that your experience and understanding of the world is vastly different than someone else's and is shaped by the social construct, forces & messages around you is a first steps towards overcoming racism. Because racism continues to work its evil upon this nation, an essential element
No two people have the same lived experience. Learning that your experience and understanding of the world is vastly different than someone else's and is shaped by the social construct, forces & messages around you is a first steps towards overcoming racism. Because racism continues to work its evil upon this nation, an essential element of the process will work to learn about current conditions and their causes, and understanding, in particular, the deeply entrenched notions of anti-Blackness that pervade our society.

Articles, movies and books are one source of information to build the capacity to truly hear and acknowledge the voices of those who have directly suffered from the effects of racism.
It is not acceptable to expect those people so weighed down by injustice to also educate us on their experience or what needs to be done by white people .
Articles, movies and books are one source of information to build the capacity to truly hear and acknowledge the voices of those who have directly suffered from the effects of racism.
It is not acceptable to expect those people so weighed down by injustice to also educate us on their experience or what needs to be done by white people . There is plenty of available information to begin doing the work required. We invite you to consider the following to begin:
Article: Both Black and White, and Neither
Book: 'White Rage: The Unspoken Truth of Our Racial Divide'
Book: 'The Invention of the White Race'
Documentary: I Am Not Your Negro
Documentary: Black America Since MLK: And Still I Rise

The 400-Year Holocaust: White America’s Legal, Psychopathic, and Sociopathic Black Genocide - and the Revolt Against Critical Race Theory examines and discusses the relationships between the legal history of anti-blackness and Whiteness through colonialism and the United States, and its impacts on present-day America. It centers anti-blac
The 400-Year Holocaust: White America’s Legal, Psychopathic, and Sociopathic Black Genocide - and the Revolt Against Critical Race Theory examines and discusses the relationships between the legal history of anti-blackness and Whiteness through colonialism and the United States, and its impacts on present-day America. It centers anti-blackness as the core tenet of "racism" in White America and amplifies its relationship to the inherent "value" of Whiteness (i.e., White identity, White culture, White institutions, etc.). The text repositions and critically examines four core White American economic, moral, socio-cultural, and ideological institutions: human sex trafficking, rape, pedophilia, and violence (murder).
It positions racism as a disease/illness (i.e., psychosis, psychopathy, sociopathy, etc.), rather than a mere "social construct"; and amplifies the significance of anti-blackness and Whiteness within and throughout White American institutions (i.e., legality, politics, language, economics, etc.), past and present.
Bahá'u'lláh

If race doesn't exist biologically, what is it? And why should it matter? Our final episode, "The House We Live In”, is the first film about race to focus not on individual attitudes and behavior but on the ways our institutions and policies advantage some groups at the expense of others. Its subject is the "unmarked" race: white people.
If race doesn't exist biologically, what is it? And why should it matter? Our final episode, "The House We Live In”, is the first film about race to focus not on individual attitudes and behavior but on the ways our institutions and policies advantage some groups at the expense of others. Its subject is the "unmarked" race: white people. We see how benefits quietly and often invisibly accrue to white people, not necessarily because of merit or hard work, but because of the racialized nature of our laws, courts, customs, and perhaps most pertinently, housing. Join us for Part 3, engage in compelling small group discussion and identify lines of action you can take to make a difference.

Join us for our May Discussion - The American Coup: Wilmington 1898
Fear, loathing, and the only successful coup d’état in American history
This is the story of the only successful overthrow of a domestic government in American history. Once generally referred to as a “riot,” the events of 1898 in Wilmington, North Carolina are now more wid
Join us for our May Discussion - The American Coup: Wilmington 1898
Fear, loathing, and the only successful coup d’état in American history
This is the story of the only successful overthrow of a domestic government in American history. Once generally referred to as a “riot,” the events of 1898 in Wilmington, North Carolina are now more widely understood to have been a massacre of its African American citizens, and the overthrow of an elected government.

The Bahá’í Community of Charlotte invites the public to attend Race Unity Day: Toward Oneness, a free and uplifting celebration dedicated to unity, justice, and collective healing. Taking place on Sunday, June 8, 2025, from 11:00 AM to 6:00 PM at the Charlotte Bahá’í Center, the event marks two years of ongoing, monthly community dialogue
The Bahá’í Community of Charlotte invites the public to attend Race Unity Day: Toward Oneness, a free and uplifting celebration dedicated to unity, justice, and collective healing. Taking place on Sunday, June 8, 2025, from 11:00 AM to 6:00 PM at the Charlotte Bahá’í Center, the event marks two years of ongoing, monthly community dialogue and action addressing anti-Black racism and promoting oneness.

As we embark on our third year of creating space for meaningful, transformative conversations about race, you are invited to see the documentary "Power". In Power, Ford examines the history of American policing in order to see what its future may hold. The slave patrols created in the 1700s to track down enslaved persons; the often violen
As we embark on our third year of creating space for meaningful, transformative conversations about race, you are invited to see the documentary "Power". In Power, Ford examines the history of American policing in order to see what its future may hold. The slave patrols created in the 1700s to track down enslaved persons; the often violent police suppression of the Civil Rights movement; and more recent wrongful deaths rhyme in ways that are difficult to ignore within a deeply entrenched framework of violent racial inequity. Yet in many communities throughout the country, the police are seen as a necessary bulwark against the threat of crime and disorder. The documentary allows this contradiction to drive the narrative forward, with insights from scholars and critics of the police alongside those of law enforcement officers and civilians whose lives have been negatively affected by policing.

Every month we gather... An essential element of the process will be honest and truthful discourse about current conditions of racism and their causes, and understanding, in particular, the deeply entrenched notions of anti-Blackness that pervade our society.
Two organizations that are addressing and working to overcoming racism in educat
Every month we gather... An essential element of the process will be honest and truthful discourse about current conditions of racism and their causes, and understanding, in particular, the deeply entrenched notions of anti-Blackness that pervade our society.
Two organizations that are addressing and working to overcoming racism in education are CREED and Down Home North Carolina. We will hear from each of these groups on the last Sunday in August at the Charlotte Bahá’í Center, 3415 Marvin Rd.
"Justice is a capacity of the human soul. It enables each of us to see the world through our own eyes and not through the eyes of others... "

A film directed by Stephanie Welch that examines the history of the eugenics movement in the United States and its perceived resurgence through contemporary genetics. The film argues that the belief in biological determinism—the idea that some groups, races, and individuals are inherently superior and more deserving of rights—has threaten
A film directed by Stephanie Welch that examines the history of the eugenics movement in the United States and its perceived resurgence through contemporary genetics. The film argues that the belief in biological determinism—the idea that some groups, races, and individuals are inherently superior and more deserving of rights—has threatened the American Dream since its inception, being used to justify the disenfranchisement of women, Black people, and Native Americans. It claims that modern genetics represents a new form of eugenics, where the concept of the "gene" is misused to justify social inequality and resist progress in racial and gender equality.
See more on our Resources Page

Race and Gun Violence
Tiffany Garner, Policy Advocate with Futures Without Violence, along with her colleague Leila Milani, will present compelling work on reducing gun violence and the unique challenges of how that work intersects with racism. Our preconceived notions and bias around fear, crime and its connection to the Black community i
Race and Gun Violence
Tiffany Garner, Policy Advocate with Futures Without Violence, along with her colleague Leila Milani, will present compelling work on reducing gun violence and the unique challenges of how that work intersects with racism. Our preconceived notions and bias around fear, crime and its connection to the Black community is investigated and illumined.
Join us Sunday, December 21 for a powerful afternoon of learning and discourse.
2:00-6:00pm at the Charlotte Bahá’í Center
“The purpose of justice is the appearance of unity among men.” — Bahá’u’lláh

We welcome Pamela G. Senegal, Executive Director of the Charlotte YWCA.
DID YOU KNOW?
The mission of the YWCA is the elimination of racism and the empowerment of women? Join us for a fascinating discussion and learn about more ways you can support this work in our community.
“When women participate fully and equally in the affairs of the wo
We welcome Pamela G. Senegal, Executive Director of the Charlotte YWCA.
DID YOU KNOW?
The mission of the YWCA is the elimination of racism and the empowerment of women? Join us for a fascinating discussion and learn about more ways you can support this work in our community.
“When women participate fully and equally in the affairs of the world, when they enter confidently and capably the great arena of life, and when they are fully recognized and empowered, then and only then will the basis for universal peace be established.” — 'Abdu'l-Bahá

Join us for a discussion on Environmental Justice with cleanAIREnc. This month’s Overcoming Racism discussion explores environmental racism; how race, place, and power intersect to determine who breathes clean air, who has safe drinking water, and who bears the burden of pollution and environmental neglect.
“We cannot segregate the human
Join us for a discussion on Environmental Justice with cleanAIREnc. This month’s Overcoming Racism discussion explores environmental racism; how race, place, and power intersect to determine who breathes clean air, who has safe drinking water, and who bears the burden of pollution and environmental neglect.
“We cannot segregate the human heart from the environment outside us and say that once one of these is reformed everything will be improved. Man is organic with the world. His inner life moulds the environment and is itself also deeply affected by it. The one acts upon the other and every abiding change in the life of man is the result of these mutual reactions.”
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