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About this conversation
“When faced with any crisis, with any kind of uncertainty or upheaval, we instinctively look to our leaders—to the people we respect and admire, who call on us to be and do better.”
—Darren Walker, President of the Ford Foundation
In this conversation, policy advocates from the New York City area, including Camonghne Felix, Molly McGrath, André M. Richardson, and Xamayla Rose, moderated by Prerana Reddy, come together with artists and creatives to discuss what participation and representation looks like in a time of crisis, as well as the symbiotic relationship between those in office and those who hold them accountable.
In conjunction with the exhibition Howardena Pindell: Rope/Fire/Water, this series of online conversations brings together artists, activists, and thinkers to discuss creative, alternative solutions to policy issues like the wealth divide, the injustice of the justice system, and the current crisis of representation in cultural and political life that threatens our democracy.
Rope/Fire/Water offers a unique opportunity to reflect on the past and think critically about our current national climate. In doing so, we will be able to reimagine what the future can be and build new, collective paths forward to a radically different society with equity at its heart.
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Participants
Xamayla Rose, deputy public advocate of civic and community empowerment, is responsible for shaping the Office of the Public Advocate’s programming and policies related to infrastructure for immigrant communities, electoral processes, democratic participation, community support, and civic engagement—including census outreach and inclusion and support for diverse populations. Prior to joining the Office of the Public Advocate, Rose was and continues to be known as a community organizer, government, and nonprofit professional who leads efforts in civic participation, workforce development, and anti-poverty initiatives.
Rose is a former strategist for New York City Human Resources Administration and previously served as the Youth Policy Analyst for the former Brooklyn borough president, Marty Markowitz, and as the managing director of advocacy for a co-founded nonprofit that focuses on maternal health. In 2018, she worked alongside civil rights groups to register more than 100,000 voters in Georgia and North Carolina. In each role she undertakes, Rose continues on her mission to protect and amplify the voices of our nation’s most vulnerable residents.
Weeksville Heritage Center is an historic site and cultural center in Central Brooklyn that uses education, arts, and a social justice lens to preserve, document, and inspire engagement with the history of Weeksville, one of the largest free Black communities in pre-Civil War America, and the Historic Hunterfly Road Houses.