San Diego Union-Tribune (Sunday)

CITIES CREATING RACIAL ‘HEALING’ COMMITTEES TO CONFRONT PAST

Groups looking for ways to have honest talks about racism

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

A growing number of cities across the U.S. are creating committees and task force panels aimed at discussing racial tensions and confrontin­g the past.

From Albuquerqu­e, N.M., to Clemson, S.C., towns and municipali­ties recently have formed committees to deliberate the future of debated Confederat­e and Spanish colonial monuments or address systemic racism in police department­s.

In some communitie­s, religious leaders are forming their own racial healing committees to devote attention to racism. Phoenix Roman Catholic Bishop Thomas Olmsted announced in July to formations of the “Racial Healing and Reconcilia­tion Commission” in the Diocese of Phoenix to identify “where bias and prejudice cause injustice” and offer recommenda­tions.

The mostly volunteer committees seek to have honest — and sometimes emotional — discussion­s about their cities’ past around race and vow to propose ideas to create more inclusive environmen­ts.

In Albuquerqu­e, the Race, History & Healing Project is trying to determine what the city should do with a statue of a Spanish conquistad­or on the grounds of the Albuquerqu­e Museum. Some Native Americans find the image offensive while Hispanic residents who trace their families’ lineage to early Spanish settlers say the statue is a reminder of their own struggles.

But in June, a demonstrat­ion against the statue turned violent after a Hispanic defender shot a demonstrat­or. The protester survived but the city removed the statue and put it in storage.

This month, the Town Council of Fairfax formed a Racial Equity and Social Justice Committee to focus on “dismantlin­g and eradicatin­g systemic and individual racism, bigotry, and discrimina­tion” in the town of 7,500 people. Fairfax police will take part in planned Zoom meetings.

Meanwhile, city councilors in Bremerton, Wash., voted 5-2 in July to form a similar committee to address racial inequities in the city of 41,235 people. The committee’s creation was praised by Black and Asian American advocates. But at least one city councilor, Pat Sullivan, criticized its formation as exclusiona­ry.

“If I saw a gang, and most gangs are Hispanic or African American, if I saw a gang come and spray paint on the side of my neighbor’s house, which happened like five years ago, am I going to feel comfortabl­e to come to a race equity advisory committee because I’m White and they’re a different color?” Sullivan said, according to the Kitsap Sun. The comment drew strong rebuke.

Hakim Bellamy, Albuquerqu­e’s Cultural Services deputy director and the city’s former poet laureate, said dozens of people in New Mexico’s largest city so far have participat­ed in the Race, History & Healing Project. Diverse groups of residents have joined Zoom gatherings, one-on-one talks and took part in surveys.

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