On April 22nd, we interviewed Lauren Jimerson for The Injured Body: A Film about Racism in America. Lauren is an artist and art therapist who has studied historical trauma, particularly in the context of her own identity and experiences, growing up on the Cattaraugus Indian Reservation, south of Buffalo, and then reconnecting with her ancestral lands, here in Rochester. She recently gave a Tedx talk about her work.

Category: projects
Interview with Tonya Noel
On April 15th, we interviewed Tonya Noel Stevens, co-founder of Flower City Noire Collective, which aims to elevate women of color and promote collective work and leadership, for The Injured Body: A Film about Racism in America. Still by Rajesh Barnabas.

collab with rachel coming up
today i had a meeting with rachel deguzman in order to kick around some ideas about working together. am thrilled to collaborate with rachel in any way and would like to give her a public shout-out for doing the cutting-edge, disruptive, courageous, and necessary work that she does in our community, for staying focused on empowering/lifting the voices of women, and for bringing an ever-expanding, diverse group of women of color into these crucial conversations. thank u for ur meticulous organizing and ability to connect the dots (as well as people), ur openness to experiences and histories from other parts of the world, and ur wonderful imagination. we are lucky to have u in rochester.
Screening of The Muslims I Know at the Third Presbyterian Church
At the Third #Presbyterian #Church, here in #Rochester, where I spoke about #Islamophobia and #racism this morning. Am now reading Harper’s magazine while The Muslims I Know is being screened. Look forward to the Q&A 🙂

Lecture and screening at Third Presbyterian Church
This Sunday, April 29th, I will be presenting at the Third Church Sunday Seminar at 9:30am. I will be speaking about #Islamophobia and #racism. Will screen #TheMuslimsIKnow at 12:30pm, followed by Q&A. These events are free and open to the public. #ThirdPresbyterianChurch is located at 4 Meigs Street, in #Rochester. Hope to see u then!
Meeting Adversity with Resistance
My piece on the Truth Commission organized by the Rochester Poor People’s Campaign, published in the Socialist Worker:
As a Muslim from the Global South, I often feel invisibilized when America’s imperial war machine and its devastating impact on people of color outside the U.S., are separated from local issues of racial and economic marginalization.
It’s clear as a bell that as long as Black and Brown bodies in the world’s hinterlands are freely tortured, famished and incinerated, there is no chance of uprooting racism or poverty inside the American empire.
Once dehumanization is activated and a war declared on the racially and economically colonized, it’s bound to cross borders and impact all of us.
This process of othering is closely tied to capitalism–its ruthlessly extractive nature and its need for a serf class. More here.
Screening of The Muslims I Know at the Church of Assumption
The screening of The Muslims I Know at the Church of Assumption, in Fairport, went extremely well last night. It was a full house, in spite of it being held on a weekday at 7pm, and the response to the film was delightfully enthusiastic, even though we had some technical glitches. People stayed for the Q&A, which could have gone on for at least another hour, but it was 9 pm and we had to wind things up. Many in the audience understood the reality of misinformation/miseducation and questioned msm. I was happy to share a list of alternative media with them.
The only pushback I got was from a woman who kept arguing that bombing Muslim-majority countries must have some benefits. She came up with this position after I mentioned the 26,000 bombs dropped on 7 Muslim-majority countries in 2016 and asked people to look at blowback coming from these sites of instability, which we have created, within that context. First she mentioned Boko Haram (which she mispronounced dramatically) and how we needed to bomb Somalia to curb their violence. Then she said something about acid attacks and how we had to do something.
I told her that bombing and destroying entire societies results in the genesis of groups like Boko Haram, not the other way around. In fact, The Muslims I Know goes briefly into the war against the Soviets in Afghanistan and how the Taliban were produced.
I also gave her an example: we are all agreed that American violence against Black communities is shockingly consistent in this country. It started with slavery but continues to this day – we hear news of killings by white supremacists or the police almost every other day. Would that constitute a large scale human rights violation? She said yes. Obviously, the US has not been able to curb this reprehensible violence against a minority. Should China bomb us because they feel obligated to “do something”? Would the bombing help us deal with these crimes? Or would movements such as #BLM, which are homegrown and fighting the system from within, be more helpful?
When I talk of another country bombing us (since we believe so strongly in humanitarian imperialism) people always become disconnected. American exceptionalism makes it impossible for them to see any connection b/w what we do and what we would feel like if we ourselves were bombed.
We view Boko Haram as evil but not the Ku Klux Klan or neo-Nazis or other armed white supremacist hate groups. We feel the scourge of acid throwing intensely (although it’s not limited to Muslim-majority countries, in fact Muslims were attacked with acid in the UK not too long ago), but we feel less enraged about the stunningly high incidence of rape on American college campuses or the use of torture on Brown and Black bodies in Guantanamo.
American superiority is so embedded in our society, so programmed into how we study history and politics, that it’s impossible to penetrate that glossy, vacuum-packed, plastic veneer and begin to measure other human lives by the same standards.
Screening of the Muslims I Know coming up in Fairport
A screening of The Muslims I Know is coming up tomorrow, April 24th at 7pm, at COTA – Church of the Assumption, 20 East Avenue in Fairport. I will be there for Q&A. The screening is free and open to the public. Hope to see u then.
Interview with Amanda Chestnut
On December 2, 2017 we interviewed Amanda Chestnut for the The Injured Body: A Film about Racism in America. Amanda is an artist whose work focuses on the representation of history and, in particular, how the history of race and gender impacts modern narratives.

Truth Commissioner for Rochester Poor People’s Campaign
I had one of the most moving experiences today as a Commissioner at a Truth Commission organized by the Rochester Poor People’s Campaign. So many testimonies detailing stories of adversity and pain but also of courage and resilience.


second dance shoot for the injured body: a film about racism in america
second #dance #shoot for #TheInjuredBody – a #film about #racism in #america – at #RCTV #studios #rochester #newyork with #dancers Mariko Yamada and Joyce Edwards #cinematography by Rajesh Barnabas

morning interview with tonya noel
this morning, as i drove to the city to interview Tonya Noel for The Injured Body: A Film about Racism in America, all the trees i encountered were covered with ice. their long, sleek, ghostly branches reminded me of a painting by anthony goicolea. sodium sulfur streetlight, 2014.
mariama colley in rochester
with all the #horrors being #inflicted on #human #beings right now – in #gaza in #kashmir in #syria – it was #inspiring to meet #mariamacolley #yesterday here in #rochester – she is an #activist #actress #filmmaker #radioshowhost and #mentor who is trying to #change the #lives of #young #people in #gambia

#mass #miseducation: a #long #table #conversation #installation
#womenofcolor give me #hope – #mass #miseducation: a #long #table #conversation #installation #organized by #racheldeguzman #today at #gallery74 in #rochester #newyork

screening in mankato
#april 10 2018: #excellent #screening of #themuslimsiknow at #minnesotastate #university #mankato #MSUM

