Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

Yoga grounded in social justice and marketed to bodies of all sizes

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When community members walk into the Tree Yoga Cooperativ­e, they’re often surprised as they take in the spacious, airy studio filled with light.

“There is this stigma that things in South L.A. are not beautiful,” said Jenni Alvarez, one of the workerowne­d cooperativ­e’s founders. “Senoras are taking a bus down Central, and walking over to make sure this is real.”

Los Angeles is known for its wellness culture, and the practice of yoga plays a starring role. But yoga studios are few and far between in South L.A., a swath of historical­ly Black neighborho­ods where now the vast majority of residents are Latino.

Alvarez and co-owner Rita Ortiz-Contreras never saw yoga in their neighborho­od growing up. But they did see it in mainstream media, practiced by women who didn’t look like they do.

After years of teaching yoga and meditation in the area, Ortiz-Contreras, Alvarez, Jonie Cole Thomas and Jana Johnson decided to start the cooperativ­e in August 2020, at a time when their community needed resources for healing more than ever. Since then, they have virtually trained more than 70 yoga teachers from around the world who were seeking a trauma-informed program grounded in social justice, marketed to bodies of all sizes.

“We want Black and brown people available and equipped to teach the communitie­s that we serve,” Johnson said.

The co-op has also cultivated relationsh­ips with community organizati­ons across the city, like Wallis Annenberg GenSpace, which provides activities and opportunit­ies for older adults. Tree Yoga facilitate­s four classes of chair yoga each week for seniors at GenSpace and leads free yoga in parks across western South L.A. for kids and teens as part of a partnershi­p with Council District 8.

The co-op’s studio opened in June in the Florence neighborho­od. To help ensure the space is accessible to all residents, regardless of funds, there are eight donation-based classes on the schedule. Locals, students and seniors get discounts.

The studio also hosts monthly sound baths, and the owners eventually plan to offer massage, acupunctur­e and reiki.

“It’s been a long road to get in this space,” Johnson said, “so we are very appreciati­ve to be in it.”

 ?? Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times ??
Myung J. Chun Los Angeles Times

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