JSP’s 2020 Statement in Solidarity with Focus on Race Relations

The following is JSP's public statement that Program Director, Jeri K. Howell, shared at Focus on Race Relations' (FORR) June 3, 2020 gathering at the Kentucky state Capitol to remember the 111th anniversary of John Maxey's lynching in Frankfort and respond to the lynching of an effigy of the governor.

We are thankful for each of you, this space, this day, and the relationships in this community. (I invite you to take a moment to look around, and witness this connection.) We acknowledge and thank the organizations here  and acknowledge the work that has been done over decades to bring us here today. And we acknowledge the work that needs to be done that is brought to our attention in these moments. 

 

To paraphrase artist/activist adrienne maree brown: We are living in the past imaginations of our ancestors. We, as future ancestors, must imagine the just and liberated world we want to exist, and work to make it true, even if we may not get to live in it. 

  • Josephine Sculpture Park remains committed to advancing social justice and cultural equity. We envision JSP as a space where everyone feels safe and welcome, and a place to play, create, and heal together.   

As such: 

  • We stand in solidarity with the Black community, and the social justice organizations working to confront systemic racism, and wholeheartedly join voices against injustice, bigotry, and racial violence. 
  • We pledge to listen to our neighbors, leaders, and artists of color, show up in partnership and solidarity with organizations working for racial justice, and offer our resources when appropriate 
  • We stand with our community here today to show that acts of intimidation and terror, such as any portrayal of lynching, will not be tolerated in our community.
  • As 2 white women, Mel and I will never understand the depths of pain and injustice that black lives have endured for so long. 
  • We pledge to each of you to continuously educate ourselves on anti-racism and take supportive actions through JSP and in our personal lives. We hope you will help hold us accountable.   
  • We are hopeful that all the work that has brought us here together today, and the myriad motivations of why you are here right now, will result in positive change. We challenge  others to identify ways that you can act in solidarity for a more just community, and country.   

 

Let’s take the community connection here today into our lives, work, and relationships. Again, to paraphrase adrienne maree brown: “Our resilience in the face of challenge is built on the strength and quality of our connectedness.”  We look forward to working alongside you, day after day, to continuously build a better community, to continuously strengthen the quality of our connectedness, here in Frankfort and beyond. Please take care of yourselves, and let’s take care of each other.     


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