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Leading Equity, Diversity, and Justice Day-October 23, 2020

Inaugural Leading EDJ Day: One Small Step on that Journey of Transformation

Tia McNair

Tia McNair, Ed.D., vice president in the Office of Diversity, Equity, and Student Success and executive director for the Truth, Racial Healing, 听鈥╝nd Transformation Campus Centers at the Association of American Colleges and Universities in Washington, D.C., delivered the conference鈥檚 keynote address, 鈥淭ruth, Healing, and Transformation: From Equity Talk to Equity Walk.鈥

More than 550 students, faculty, staff, alumnae/i, and trustees joined together to explore themes of race and racial justice during Hollins鈥 first annual Leading Equity, Diversity, and Justice (EDJ) Day on October 23.听

Classes were canceled and administrative offices were closed to foster full engagement in the day鈥檚 program, which featured 35 in-person and online sessions presented by members of the university community and invited guest speakers.听

鈥淟eading EDJ is the result of an awesome collaboration among folks from across our campus,鈥 Professor of Anthropology and Gender and Women鈥檚 Studies and Director of Faculty Development LeeRay Costa said in her opening remarks. 鈥淲hat began as an idea for advancing critical conversations around inclusion, identity, and equity on our campus became today鈥檚 event in the span of just 42 days.鈥澨

LeeRay Costa

Costa

Costa added that Hollins, like other colleges and universities around the country, reacted to the deaths of George Floyd and Breonna Taylor and the reinvigoration of the Black Lives Matter movement this summer 鈥渨ith a statement of solidarity and shared anguish over the suffering of our fellow human beings, and a promise to do more. And like so many other institutions, Hollins was called out by some for being generous with our words but repeatedly failing to live those words in ways that have meaningful difference to marginalized and underserved members of our community.鈥 She explained that Hollins still needs to come to terms with its own history of racial injustice, including the use of enslaved people to support the institution and its mission.听

鈥淭o say that Hollins University was built on the backs of Black and Brown people is not hyperbole, nor is it meant to incite,鈥 Costa said. 鈥淚t is merely to tell the truth.鈥澨

In her welcome, Hollins President Mary Dana Hinton paid tribute to Costa and the committee of campus community members that brought the concept of Leading EDJ Day to reality. 鈥淎 different group might have said, 鈥楲et鈥檚 wait until it鈥檚 easier. Let鈥檚 look away. Let鈥檚 not do our part; perhaps someone else will do it for us.鈥 But this group, this committee for whom I am so very grateful, looked at one another and said, 鈥楲et鈥檚 do this.鈥 We did it because our students and this institution that we love so dearly needed us to. Because we all deserve more. We all deserve better.鈥澨

Mary D. Hinton

Hinton

Hinton also praised the more than 40 Hollins students who planned and presented sessions during the day that 鈥渃ome from a place of care, a desire to belong, a need to be seen and appreciated for their experiences, both good and bad. Our students genuinely believe they can make us better, and we them.鈥澨

Makda Kalayu 鈥23 co-led the presentation 鈥淐aring for Your Neighbors: Promoting Beloved Community,鈥 along with Kiah Patterson 鈥23 and Tyler Sesker 鈥22. The session featured an exercise to encourage attendees to identify their own implicit biases, followed by a discussion on identifying and breaking down stereotypes of Black people that impact those biases.听

鈥淚t was a great space to have these difficult conversations,鈥 Kalayu reflected. 鈥淎 mix between faculty, staff, and alumnae/i diversified the discussion and encouraged people to talk. And [it] also helped to direct the conversation in a really interesting way. Everyone was super respectful. A lot of [participants] came in with an eagerness to learn about the topic.鈥澨

鈥淭he New Vanguard: Pushing the Envelope in Revolutionary Discourse,鈥 moderated by Leah Coltrane 鈥22 and Amy Duncan 鈥21, explored ways of not only transforming one鈥檚 own community, but also the way one interacts with their community and themselves on a daily basis.听

Diversity Monologue Troupe

Diversity Monologue Troupe

鈥淲e carry a lot of trauma, and making space to take care of those things is important,鈥 Coltrane told attendees. 鈥淚f you鈥檙e not taking care of your spiritual self while trying to learn, trying to do this work, you will not be successful.鈥澨

Tia McNair, Ed.D., vice president in the Office of Diversity, Equity, and Student Success and executive director for the Truth, Racial Healing, and Transformation Campus Centers at the Association of American Colleges and Universities in Washington, D.C., delivered the conference鈥檚 keynote address, 鈥淭ruth, Healing, and Transformation: From Equity Talk to Equity Walk.鈥澨

McNair encouraged attendees 鈥渢o figure out the kind of institution you鈥檙e going to be, and stay true to that in all areas as we clarify our actions. To be equity-minded is a mode of thinking exhibited by practitioners who are willing to assess their own racialized assumptions, to acknowledge their lack of knowledge in the history of race and racism, to take responsibility for the success of historically underserved and minoritized student groups, and to not only build their knowledge about race and racism, but also to critically assess racialization in our own practices as educators and administrators.鈥澨

Black Lives Matter

Black Lives Matter artwork outside the Eleanor D. Wilson Museum

Costa emphasized that the first Leading EDJ Day 鈥渋s just one small step on that journey of transformation to becoming a more equitable and just university, workplace, and, in the words of [feminist theorist, cultural critic, artist, and writer] bell hooks, a 鈥榟ome place.鈥 A place where every single one of us feels like we belong. It鈥檚 an opportunity for truth-telling, for listening with our defenses down and our hearts and minds open, and for learning new ways of being together across our differences.鈥澨

Stressing Hollins鈥 鈥渦nique responsibility to create an environment wherein each person feels and is loved as they are,鈥 Hinton expressed the university鈥檚 obligation as a liberal arts institution 鈥渢o explore, to know, to honor, and to hold with care the experiences of those around us. To engage multiple perspectives that challenge our own. To open and free our minds to engage with ideas, concepts, people, and experiences that challenge us. That force us to think critically and creatively. That demand we solve the complex problems of the day in conversation with others.听

Talmadge Recital Hall

Talmadge Recital Hall hosted 鈥淭he Legacy of Slavery at Hollins鈥

鈥淭he liberal arts demand this work of leading equity, diversity, and justice. Indeed, today reflects the meaning and purpose of education and our collective responsibility and mutual accountability to all those we encounter.鈥澨

Babcock Auditorium

Local resident Jordan Bell presented 鈥淏lack History of Roanoke鈥 in Babcock Auditorium

 

Drumming Circle

Drumming Circle for the Ancestors

Photos by Sharon Meador and Billy Faires