“Love and Prayer Sustain Our Work” Building Collective Power, Health, and Healing as the Community Health Board Coalition
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Community Health Board Coalition
- Afghan Health Board
- African American Health Board
- African Leaders Health Board
- Afro Descendant and Indigenous Health Board
- Cham Health Board
- Congolese Health Board
- Eritrean Health Board
- Ethiopian Community Health Council
- Filipinx Health Board
- Iraqi/Arab Health Board
- Khmer Community Health Board
- Latinx Health Board
- Pacific Island Health Board
- Somali Health Board
- Vietnamese Health Board
3. Responding to the Ongoing COVID-19 Pandemic
3.1. Mental Health
- Strengthening partnerships and training among community health workers and mental health systems.
- Advancing programs and services that address the root causes of mental illness in BIPOC communities.
- Increasing the number of BIPOC mental health priorities.
- Ensuring that BIPOC communities have access to culturally grounded mental health services.
3.2. Community Health Priorities Work
4. Arriving to the Work and Sustaining the Movement Together
5. Robin
5.1. Growing Up with Adverse Childhood Experiences
5.2. Historical Trauma and Slow Violence
5.3. Biopower
5.4. Survivance
5.5. The Birth of the Community Health Board Coalition
6. Damarys
6.1. One
6.2. Two
“Cada quién lleva su moralito. A algunos les pesa más que a otros.”This is how women in my family speak heartacheHow abuela y mama invoke stories of dispossession and violenceThe weight of patriarchy and colonialism anchoring stories deep within the children they birthedTo emerge, again and again, in the softness of intimacyIn the daybreak of relationshipsIn the loneliness of self-reflection,In the tired shoulders of a lover betrayed by a history too heavy to carry alone
6.3. Three
6.4. Four
Maxkirai, I loved and prayed you into existence. You, our family’s future matriarch, are hope made flesh. Just as my love and prayer birthed you, it is love and prayer that sustain my work with the CHBC, which ultimately is to create a world where you and others like you will live a full and healthy life. This, daughter, is y(our) birthright.
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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1 | CHBC is at the frontlines of the COVID-19 response in the Seattle and King County region. Our members are medical doctors, nurses, mental health providers, community health workers, hospital administrators, professors, and researchers. Data on the disparate impact of COVID-19 on BIPOC in our region is rooted in the lived-experiences and expert wisdom of our members. We also draw on emerging data from our broader base. |
2 | |
3 | Consistent with Freirean pedagogy, we use the notion of conscientization and work to mitigate the culture of silence which Friere describes as when oppressed people are unable to critically reflect on their world and become fatalistic and dominated (Freire 2000). |
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Espinoza, D.; Narruhn, R. “Love and Prayer Sustain Our Work” Building Collective Power, Health, and Healing as the Community Health Board Coalition. Genealogy 2021, 5, 3. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy5010003
Espinoza D, Narruhn R. “Love and Prayer Sustain Our Work” Building Collective Power, Health, and Healing as the Community Health Board Coalition. Genealogy. 2021; 5(1):3. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy5010003
Chicago/Turabian StyleEspinoza, Damarys, and Robin Narruhn. 2021. "“Love and Prayer Sustain Our Work” Building Collective Power, Health, and Healing as the Community Health Board Coalition" Genealogy 5, no. 1: 3. https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy5010003