June Recap: RYSE PRYDE 2021

June Recap: RYSE PRYDE 2021

RYSE Pryde 2021 celebration kicked off this month with a POSE theme! As we POSE with RYSE we would like to honor the Ballroom Culture born out of the Black and Latinx LGBTQ+ community in NY. The culture goes beyond the extravagant events. Participants also belong to groups known as “houses,” a long standing tradition in LGBTQ+ communities of color, where chosen family, familial relationships often formed in place of estranged family, live in households together. Each post we highlighted a different member of the LGBTQ+ community and the amazing work they’ve done, all in the theme of the TV show POSE!…

Investing in BIPOC Youth Power: Trusting Our Struggles & Our Dreams.

Investing in BIPOC Youth Power: Trusting Our Struggles & Our Dreams.

Earlier today, MacKenzie Scott and Dan Jewett announced a $2.7 billion contribution to 286 organizations. RYSE is incredibly honored to be announced alongside these groups. We are grateful to Ms. Scott, Mr. Jewett, and their team for this profound financial investment in our work. RYSE exists because twenty years ago, queer, BIPOC young people had the courage to organize and demand a space in their city that centers their collective healing, bold visions, and immense creativity…

May Recap: Youth leaders RYSing for Justice & Liberation!

May Recap: Youth leaders RYSing for Justice & Liberation!

May was all about youth platforms, with the multiple youth-led workshops and open mics, as well as opportunities, with internships and workshops delving into life after high school. May was also AAPI Heritage Month. Representing the AAPI community and the spirit of the multiple RYSE youth who displayed their power this month, here is a forward by Ann Guiam, former RYSE member and current RYSE staff!…

April Recap: Spotlighting the arts, arts workers, & International Worker’s Movement

April Recap: Spotlighting the arts, arts workers, & International Worker’s Movement

April was an abundant month at RYSE.

To set the tone, it was both RYSE’s International Worker’s Movement theme for April and California’s Arts, Culture, & Creativity Month. This also happened to coincide with our art-heavy Leadership Institute, the 4 week audition period for our in-house multimedia theatrical production The Land of Sankofa, and arts collaborations with our partners, including WCCUSD. Arts workers were on the brain this month…

Still Imagining Justice

Still Imagining Justice

Justice is a gatekept term. Who gets to define justice? Within the criminal legal system, justice is defined for Black and Brown communities and not by our Black and Brown communities: these state-defined parameters limiting our imagination of what we need and deserve.

Justice isn’t one jury verdict. Justice would look at the full breadth of the system and ensure there won’t be more violence tomorrow; violence in all of its forms. It shouldn’t take the most hardcore, visceral form of it for the world to respond, demanding a justice that doesn’t truly address the root…

Not Pictured

Not Pictured

RYSE is tired. We are tired of the ongoing and persistent violence against Black bodies. We are tired of having to create post after post of murder by the state against our Black kin. Tired of posts about murder and harm against our kin that look like us, that are us. Tired of quelling our righteous rage at the systems that are quelling our humanity.

We are very tired of the media’s love affair with white saviors, and white validation of Black and Brown pain and trauma to make it real and worthy. Tired of all our systems’ toxic love affair with whiteness, made possible by the deletion of Black and Brown labor, existence, and resilience. This picture has been shown and elevated across media platforms all over the world….

A Recap of International Women's Month at RYSE

A Recap of International Women's Month at RYSE

An excerpt from Stephanie, 17, a RYSE Youth Organizing Team Member speaking at the Sisters in Solidarity International Women’s Day celebration on March 6th!

“Young people care about what is going on in the world. Many adults I have encountered have underestimated me because I am young. But that hasn’t stopped nor will it stop me anytime soon. I have been in positions where elected officials have told me I was too young to understand vocabulary and politics. Of course I proved them wrong, I stand my ground strong. Whenever I hear those comments, I get excited because I’m pretty sure they’ve never seen me in action. And if they did they’d know who I am and what I will become: a strong leader. I do admit, it does get frustrating when your ideas are crushed down and your opinions are just shattered just because you are young. But that should never stop me. That is why we don’t see many of our students and youth involved because things are rarely centered around us and for us. When we are in spaces, adults always ignore us as if we aren’t in there … I might be young, but that does not stop me from experiencing racism, homophobia, sexism, and so much more. At times I do get discouraged, especially in spaces when I’m the only youth there, however I am fortunate enough to have the amazing support system that I have today that keeps me grounded and actively pushes me to do better. I cannot do this work just for myself. And I don’t just do it for myself. I do it for my students, the people who possibly just need a mentor like I did when I was younger … this is just a long fight for change, especially when fighting ageism.”

Violence happens before violence happens. RYSE stands in solidarity with our Asian communities, most notably Asian women and elders who are facing increased verbal violence materializing into multiple acts of physical violence today and this past year as a whole. The six women brutally murdered Tuesday night are only the latest occurrence. Let’s be clear: failing to label it what it is, violence rooted in white supremacy, capitalism and misogyny, is also violence. The already perverse mishandling of this story only intensifies the Asian community’s vulnerability and it is important we fortify all context to see this for what it is. 

A 150% increase in anti-Asian violence this past year is something none of us should grow numb to. Anti-Asian rhetoric coming from the top levels of our government and trickling down is something none of us should accept. And that rhetoric is something none of us should view as harmless. Nor should we with any anti-Black rhetoric, which misorients the conversation away from the central topic, the shared threat, the root problem, of white supremacy: which both communities have historically formed national and international solidarity movements around to combat. Today, still, we stand in solidarity.

This is also a story about the experience of low-wage Asian women workers. At this place where racial fetishization and sexism meet, these women were made objects in their murderer’s eyes: objects he perceived to have the power to hold or discard at will. Just the same, to inaccurately tell their story, to misplace the focus, or to shrug off this act as one man’s “bad day” is to commit yet another act of violence. To consume the six  women as a simple headline would be the final act of violence committed against them: reducing their very real, very valuable lives to just another passing event. It would also be the beginning act of violence to the Asian community as they exist today; the violence that happens before violence happens. We vehemently reject this.

We also stand in support and solidarity with our Asian communities here in Richmond and West Contra Costa County, who were part of the visioning and organizing for RYSE and are on the frontlines of racial justice, climate justice, and economic justice in our communities ensuring liberation for all BIPOC communities. Until we are all free from the violence of white supremacy, none of us are free. 

To our members, RYSE loves you and we are here to support you. If you need to reach out please send us a direct message or call/text 510-255-1940.

And to our community members and partners, we invite you to read and sign on to the Asian Americans Advancing Justice-Atlanta Letter: http://bit.ly/gaAAPIorgsignon. You can also support by donating to support the victims and their families: bit.ly/DonateToGeorgiaAAPICommunity or sharing crisis response resources: bit.ly/georgiaAAPIcommunitycare

Orgs to follow:

Red Canary Song

Asian American Writer’s Workshop

Stop AAPI Hate

Asian American Feminist Collective

18 Million Rising

February Recap: Honoring Black Joy, Rage, Healing, & Ancestors

February Recap: Honoring Black Joy, Rage, Healing, & Ancestors

On January 3rd, 2021, our beloved Marissa Snoddy, RYSE Clinical Director, passed away suddenly at the age of 35. Marissa was a community leader, healer, friend, colleague, sister, auntie, and daughter. She is now shining on us as an ancestor. RYSE truly appreciates all the love and care sent, shared, and held as we have been grieving and remembering Marissa. We celebrated her life this month, forging community, trading stories, sharing laughter, shedding tears, playing her favorite music, and honoring her essence. Our staff member TJ Sykes wrote an amazing poem to honor her, as you can read below.

1202021: FORWARD, BACKWARD

1202021: FORWARD, BACKWARD

They’ll undoubtedly tell us to slow down soon.

Yesterday the sun cut through. Shortly, color will start to bloom all around us. The soon-to-be changing seasons feel appropriate right about now. I mean that less like America’s conditions shifting dramatically and more like a reflection of the cycles us citizens find ourselves in and out of. This won’t be our first spring. Nor was this our first winter.

“Freedom is a constant struggle” is one of my favorite quotes. Shout outs to Angela Davis. The phrase swiftly undercuts this silent assumption that, despite the nature of where we’re at, eventually there will be a big climactic win marking the beginning of a happily ever after; a spring complete with sunshine and flowers that comes and stays for good. But America is America. We are tethered to its history no matter what season it is or who happens to be in office and our freedom will not be a linear path with a definitive end. It will be constant. And it will contain struggle.