Free U strategy mtg this Saturday, August 3, @12pm

UPDATE: Rain relocation plan for today’s 12pm mtg:

It looks like things may get drizzly by noon, so let’s move to Think Coffee at 3rd and Mercer! Call 979.204.9253 if you get lost.

Free U fam: Our next coordination mtg will be this Saturday, August 3, at Washington Square Park. Meet at 12pm at the fountain, and we’ll find a spot on the grass nearby. This can be an opportunity to reflect on our summer’s events, as well as strategize Free U’s future direction and impact. As the Fall 2013 semester soon approaches, and a variety of solid NYC organizing campaigns are picking up traction, let’s discuss how best to use our skills, resources, and networks to continue transforming our education (both in and out of schools) and communities. See you there!

“Reclaim the Commons” Free University a solid success!

Many thanks to all who co-created our “Reclaim the Commons” Free University on Saturday! An amazing schedule, thoughtful participants, and bountiful pizza to end the day. Our next coordinating meeting will be Saturday, August 3rd, at 12pm. We’ll meet at the Washington Square Park fountain, and then find a shady spot nearby. Please save the date. Until then, stay cool out there.

NEW LOCATION / SCHEDULE for Saturday, July 20, “Reclaim the Commons” Free University

NEW LOCATION: Due to the likelihood of a whole lotta rain tomorrow, the “Reclaim the Commons” Free University will move indoors to 16 Beaver St., 4th floor, in Manhattan. Come join us! Sessions 1-6pm, Potluck dinner 6pm.
Closest subways: Take the Q (which is running via the R) to Whitehall. Or the 4, 5 to Bowling Green.

RSVP here: http://bit.ly/1azuWho

“Reclaim the Commons” Free University schedule

Free University-NYC Brief Welcome and Statement of Intention
1pm

“Holding the NYPD Accountable: Community Organizing and People Power”
Meejin – CAAAV Organizing Asian Communities
1pm
This workshop requires an enthusiastic audience! It will cover basic Know Your Rights with the NYPD information in addition to participant discussion about current work being done by CAAAV and other community groups to put an end to discriminatory policing in NYC and to ensure our communities are simultaneously building a culture and movement of looking out for each other when it comes to the NYPD.

“Teach/Learn at The Public School”
Nova Benway – The Public School
1pm
The Public School will briefly present our volunteer-led program of free classes in Greenpoint and elsewhere, and answer questions about how those interested can propose their own classes/workshops/reading groups. We are also interested to hear how we might contribute to thinking about education and the commons, in NYC and beyond.

“Prison Education: Liberation and Cooptation”
Natalie Marr – Coloring Outside the Lines
1pm
Take your body and move the way that expresses your true self and how you see it. Coloring Outside the Lines creates an opportunity for us to discuss we are and how we contribute to our communities while creating a new community of passionate individuals. This workshop will be a short demonstration of self care to condition your body but share who you are without words.

“New York City at the Crossroads”
Eric Darton
2pm
NYC at the Crossroads will focus on strategies toward building a more self-sustaining, equitable and diversified economic base to support the vibrant cultural mix that flourishes here. We’ll begin by focusing on historical aspects of the city’s transformation since the post-war era. After this, I’ll facilitate a group discussion aimed at establishing guiding principles and identifying concrete practices toward reshaping the city’s social, political and physical structures around the real needs of its people.

“Conversations about War in a Cry for Peace”
Sharmin Hossain – Ya-Ya Network
2pm
A conversation on the “War on Terror” and Violence and the the different forms of violence existing in our reality. As oppressed people, we live in a constant state of crisis. This is an open circle of healing and reflective of a lot of chaos and news.

“What it means to be a [insert your race here] [insert your gender here] in America – An open discussion”
Tesaen Chavis
2pm
This open discussion will provide an open forum for those people wishing to discuss their experiences growing up a [race, gender] in America. What does it mean to be a black female in this country? What does it mean to be a hispanic male? How can we tackle perceived stereotypes of the various groups within America and what can we do to open up an ongoing dialogue between these groups? People will have the ability to connect, share stories, laugh, cry, and walk away with a little bit of someone’s history of growing up a [race, gender] within this nation.

“Deny them the Data: Opting out of Corporate-Owned Education Reform”
Morna McDermott and Sarah Wottowa – United Opt Out
2pm
United Opt Out is a national organization that provides resources for ending corporate ownership of public education, and calls for community/parent/teacher led actions that will help place the public back in public education. July 4th 2013 we launched our “Declare Your Independence” campaign, which includes state-by-state Opt Out guides that provide necessary information for parents seeking to opt their children out of high stakes testing. Our motto is “deny them the data”–this workshop will provide an overview of how corporations are dismantling public education and what community members can do to fight back and reclaim our schools.

“Saving Black and Brown Life (Trayvon and Beyond)–Organizing Strategic Resistance against Police, Vigilante, Horizontal and Vertical Violence against our Youth”
Sumumba Sobukwe – Occu-Evolve
3pm
A teach-in in the aftermath of the George Zimmerman verdict and upcoming struggles against police brutality and the murder of black and brown youth. Also a brief discussion of horizontal and vertical violence in black and brown communities.

“Overtested and Indebted: Critiquing and Imagining Education (Together)”
Jason and Winter
3pm
This last year we’ve seen student walk outs against austerity cuts, boycotts against the testing regime, labor strikes against racist and neoliberal education policies, university occupations and attempts at debt strikes. From Seattle to Chicago to Philly to New York, an education revolution is underway in the U.S. We gather together to ask some big questions about what all of this means. How does our education system operate? How does it function in the Commons? What kinds of people does it create? What are the connections between labor, testing, financialization and debt? What other kinds of education systems can we imagine?

“Food Justice & Food Sovereignty”
Simone Herbin – Brooklyn Food Coalition
3pm
During this discussion, participants will discuss how race and class affect access to healthy, affordable food in various communities as well as explore solutions to empower individuals to form strong, food secure and sovereign communities looking to models across the country and around the world.

“TPP: The 1%’s Stealth Attack on the Common”
Adam Weissman – TradeJustice New York Metro
4pm
Behind closed doors, US trade negotiators and representatives of the governments of 11 other countries are negotiating the Trans-Pacific Partnership, an international agreement that will erode the commons in the interest of corporate profits. We need to work together to develop a novel type of alliance among organizations specialized in trade-related issues, environmental and development organisations, Occupiers and digital commoners, social organizations and trade unions, indigenous people and geeks etc, to demand recognition for the thousands of alternatives that can be said to belong to the Commons Sector. Join representatives of OWS TradeJustice to discuss how we can defend the commons and stop TPP!

“Occupy Education and Empowerment”
Sati – Occu-Evolve (OWS)
4pm
Helping the youth in their educational endeavour is one of the most important social services we can think of. As such, with a hope to reinvigorate our Occupy movement, we are going to reactivate “Occupy Education and Empowerment.”

“Parks: The Gateway Space”
Rashid Owoyele – Make Your Mark’s Community Director
4pm
This will be a discussion on the power of young people, design, and technology in the pursuit of reclaiming our cities. We’re starting with parks! Make Your Mark is an urban parks stewardship program for youth that connects STEM education (science, technology, engineering and math) to design and environmental and social justice. Partnership for Parks, an innovative joint program of the City Parks Foundation and New York City Parks and Recreation, is funding a pilot program this summer that will engage youth from the Grand Street Settlement, a nonprofit that provides community services on Lower East Side of Manhattan, as stewards of the East River Park, a 57-acre park along the East River that has undergone extensive renovations over the past two decades and was badly impacted by Hurricane Sandy.

“Diversity of Tactics in the Civil Rights Movement, 1956-1965: A Case Study”
Lorenzo Raymond – AFFECT/New York Year Zero
4pm
Popular history characterizes the civil rights struggle as a period when social movements were supposedly pacifistic and innately liberal, but the black freedom movement did not win its greatest victories until it resorted to radical and diverse tactics. CUNY historian Jeanne Theoharis’ recent biography of Rosa Parks casts a critical eye on the aftermath of the Montgomery Bus Boycott, describes the early onset of white backlash, and reminds us that Mrs. Parks expressed ardent gratitude to Malcolm X, Robert F. Williams, and other militants for giving the movement teeth as it reached maturity in the 1960s. From the paralyzing white backlash in Montgomery after the bus boycott, to the realization of the limits of nonviolence after the Albany campaign of 1962, to the riotous awakening in Birmingham in 1963, to the turbulent summer that led up to the March on Washington, to the credible foreshadow of a “dark night of social disruption” that Dr. King warned of if the Civil Rights Act was not passed, to Malcolm X’s role in the Selma campaign, this talk will examine how the freedom movement used a diversity of tactics to overcome the twin dilemmas of repression and marginalization that it faced on its way to making history.

“Stop, Drop, and Roll: From Fossil Fuel Divestment to Reinvestment”
Rose Espinola – Responsible Endowments Coalition (REC)
5pm
The fossil fuel industry is endangering global communities and the climate; it is time for our universities to cut ties with these destructive corporations. But divestment alone is not enough. What kind of world do we envision for the future? In this workshop we are going to build tools and knowledge for incorporating a demand for reinvestment into a fossil fuel divestment campaign. Reinvestment means investing in our communities and in businesses committed to creating just and equitable solutions in areas like energy, manufacturing, and technology. Join us to learn how to get your campus involved!

“How Does Housing Influence Gender Roles?”
Mitsue
5pm
This will be an open discussion about the changing roles of men and women in the home and residential communities, and in what ways housing has influenced our gender roles. Who builds our homes and for what purposes? Does housing meet the needs of women and/or men? What makes a home transgendered or ungendered? If we understand how gender and housing relate to one another, what changes can be made with housing to influence our perceived gender roles?

“Zine Workshop”
Dr. Courtney Lee Weida – Adelphi University Zine & Altered Book Library
5pm
Create zines for the new Zine & Altered Book Library at Adelphi University. Share resources, stories, essays, images, and your personal voice/vision with students and educators.

Potluck Dinner
6pm
Some food will be provided by Free University, but also please bring some to share!
Vegetarian and vegan options available.

FreeUniversityNYC@gmail.com
FreeUniversityNYC.org
www.facebook.com/FreeUniversityNYC
www.facebook.com/events/559109630797396/

“Reclaim the Commons” – Free University, July 20, Fort Greene Park

“Reclaim the Commons” 

Free University in Fort Greene Park 


Saturday, July 20
Fort Greene Park, Brooklyn
1-5pm, followed by potluck dinner

Sign up here! http://bit.ly/1azuWho

On July 20, 2013, as part of our summer series, the Free University welcomes one and all to learn and share how to reclaim the NYC commons. The future of our diverse communities’ struggles are inextricably linked, as is our need for space to strategize together in person. We invite you to contribute a workshop / lead a discussion about community justice projects, lessons from past struggles, and ideas for future victories. We aim to forge networks and solidarity around such themes as:

Education K-PhD
Access to Public Space/Commons
Housing/Anti-Gentrification
Work/Unionization in and out of Home
Anti-Police Brutality/Stop Stop and Frisk
Prison Reform/Abolition
Women’s power
LGBTQIA power
Immigration Reform/Amnesty
Transportation Access/Alternatives
Climate Change/Justice
Community-Shared Governance
Food Justice/Insecurity
Arts, Culture, and Play

RSVP/contribute classes/participate – http://bit.ly/1azuWho 

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/events/559109630797396/
Email FreeUniversityNYC@gmail.com for more information.

Come join us in the park!
Free University-NYC

“The right to the city is far more than the individual liberty to access urban resources: it is a right to change ourselves by changing the city.” – David Harvey

“It is not our differences that divide us. It is our inability to recognize, accept, and celebrate those differences.” – Audre Lorde

Why does education matter? An exciting new blog!

Education Matters was born from a number of conversations in and out of academic institutions, from the CUNY Graduate Center to the Free University of NYC, and many places in between.

The hope is to generate an archive of imagination. Of possibilities and visions for education beyond neoliberal narratives of Massive Open Online Courses (MOOCs), standardized testing, centralized bureaucratic control of curricula, and precarious adjuncts.

This is an open invitation to be idealistic. What would education look like if we could bracket economic factors? If we could pause for just a moment to reflect upon what it is we are fighting for? Rather than putting student debt or tuition at the forefront of our thought, what would education be if all of these could magically disappear? What possibilities might open up by participating in such a collective thought experiment? In an effort to move beyond critique and into creation, while understanding that the two are actually inseparable, it might be useful to consider what educational experiences you have found fruitful, satisfying, inspiring and/or galvanizing. Think about what delights, excites, and incites you.

The question is simple: Why does education matter? Feel free to interpret liberally, radically, heretically, literally, figuratively, tangentially, wildly. Choose a medium of expression that feels right.

http://opencuny.org/educationmatters/

Assata Free University event success! Connect again this Saturday.

Hearty thanks to all of you who came out to the “Assata Shakur’s Legacy & Lives of Resistance” Free University last Saturday in Marcus Garvey Park. Many participants from the neighborhood and around the city shared how critically insightful, collectively affirming, and politically rooting our experiences were, and are eager to take next steps together.

We invite you to keep Free University-NYC active and growing — our next coordinating meeting will be this Saturday, June 22nd, at 1:30pm in Central Park (enter at 110th st and Lenox ave). Please bring a friend, a snack to share, and ideas for what future Free U themes and collaborations should be!

in struggle, celebration, and mutual support,
-Free University-NYC

e-mail: freeuniversitynyc@gmail.com
web: freeuniversitynyc.org
like our fb page
join our fb discussion group
twitter: @FreeUnivNYC #FreeU
press: freeupress@gmail.com
flickr: send your Free U photos to freeuphotos@lavabit.com

Schedule for 6.15 “Assata Shakur’s Legacy & Lives of Resistance” Free University

“Assata Shakur’s Legacy & Lives of Resistance” Free University
June 15, 2013
12-6pm
Marcus Garvey Park, Harlem, NYC
(enter south side at 120th st and 5th ave)
RSVP/share on facebook

ALL DAY:
Arts, Crafts, Food, Care station
Bring art materials, blankets, food, and extra care. Join the national art project to create “Assata is (STILL) Welcome Here” artwork.

“Story Booth” oral history station
Share thoughts and stories of movement histories, struggles, and celebrations. Who is your favorite freedom fighter? When did you get involved in social justice? What kind of change do you wish to help create in the world? What inspires you to be politically active? All ages, big and small, are invited to share your reflections.

SCHEDULE:
Free University-NYC Brief Welcome and Statement of Intention
12pm sharp!

“The Chicago and South Africa Anti-Eviction Campaigns”
Deshonay Dozier
12pm

“Discussion on Michelle Alexander’s The New Jim Crow, the war on drugs, and mass incarceration”
Fury Young
12pm
A presentation/discussion on the drug war and mass incarceration. Research culled from Michelle Alexander’s 2010 book The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness. A brief teach-in of the war on drugs, and the rise of the prison industrial complex from 1982 to the present.

“Prison Education: Liberation and Cooptation”
Progressive Education Initiative
1pm
Teachers from the Progressive Education Initiative will give a presentation about the current educational opportunities – and lack thereof – in the women’s facility on Rikers Island. We will also invite workshop participants to strategize on how to connect activism for educational justice with prisoners’ struggles.

“Teaching Assata Shakur ar Riker’s Island”
Tony Gronowicz
2pm

“Joining The Struggle Against Police Terror with the Freeing of All U.S. Held Political Prisoners/Prisoners of War & Exiles”
Brother Shep
2pm

“Critical Walk – Harlem African Burial Ground”
Matthew Bissen
2pm
This class will discuss the history and legacy of the Harlem African Burial Ground and the current efforts by community organizations to bring this legacy back to the surface. It will include a walk through the neighborhood to experience and discuss aspects of the 1658 Nieuw Haarlem Dutch colony which still influences the urban context of today and the site of the burial ground.

“Writing and Resistance for Home, School, and Everyday Life”
Susan Naomi Bernstein
2pm
For new and experienced writers: This course presents the processes of writing for anyone who struggles to write. Together we will develop our own practices of writing for audiences and purposes that connect to our visions of resistance to oppression – and for social transformation – of home, school, and everyday life.

“Overtested and Indebted: Critiquing and Imagining Education (Together)”
Jason and Winter
3pm
This last year we’ve seen student walk outs against austerity cuts, boycotts against the testing regime, labor strikes against racist and neoliberal education policies, university occupations and attempts at debt strikes. From Seattle to Chicago to Philly to New York, an education revolution is underway in the U.S.
In honor of Assata Shakur, we gather together to ask some big questions about what all of this means. How does our education system operate? How does it perpetuate class and racial inequalities? What kinds of people does it create? What are the connections between labor, testing, financialization and debt? What other kinds of education systems can we imagine?

“Assata Shakur’s Memoir is a Tool for Liberation”
Nicholas Powers
3pm
The goal of the workshop is to introduce participants to the ideas in Shakur’s memoir which are still relevant today such as: Double-Consciousness, personal transformation and liberation ideology. If you can, please bring your copy of her book, but it’s not necessary.

“Radical History of CUNY and SUNY”
Biola Jeje
4pm
New York Students Rising will give a workshop on the radical history of CUNY and SUNY student struggles and what students today are doing to defend public higher education.

“From FBI’s COINTELPRO to NSA’s PRISM: a community dialogue on resisting state repression”
5pm
The recent revelations of the US government’s massive surveillance operation PRISM, in collusion with several major online and phone companies, has made state repression a topic of critical conversation everywhere. For those who know the history of COINTELPRO in violently targeting social movements, this news causes special alarm as well as radicalizing opportunities. It may dissuade people from taking political action, or it may urge people to get involved. More whistleblowers may come forward. Social movements’ alternatives may finally get the hearing we deserve. In solidarity with Assata Shakur’s ongoing legacy of struggle, we welcome a dialogue on past, present, and possible futures of state repression, and how our communities for transformative justice can respond. We will not be silenced, so let us strategize together how to use our voices and actions most effectively.

Potluck Dinner
6pm
Some food will be provided by Free University, but also please bring some to share! Vegetarian and vegan options available.

Flyer for June 15 Assata Shakur Free University

Free U fam,

Please print and share our June 15 event flyer openly and often.
Next Free U planning mtg: this Saturday, 12pm, City Hall Park fountain (enter at Park Row and Beekman st).
Register/contribute classes at www.FreeUniversityNYC.org/Assata

AssataShakurFreeU

“Assata Shakur’s Legacy & Lives of Resistance”

“Assata Shakur’s Legacy & Lives of Resistance”
Free University in Marcus Garvey Park

Saturday, June 15th
12pm – 6pm
Marcus Garvey Park in Harlem
(enter the south side at 120th st and 5th ave)

The actions and writings of Assata Shakur, a Black Liberation activist living in exile in Cuba,  have been influential to a wide range of activists. Our theme – “Assata Shakur’s Legacy & Lives of Resistance” – connects Assata Shakur’s political and personal work with a network of people who have dedicated our lives to struggle, celebration, and social change.

In solidarity with the “Assata Teach-In” series, this Free University-NYC and Brecht Forum collaboration invites friends, families, comrades, and community groups to learn and share transformative education in public space. A potluck dinner will be served at 6pm (please RSVP so we can prepare enough food).

**Register/contribute classes – fill out THIS FORM**
Share on Facebook

Confirmed classes:
-Assata Shakur’s Legacy (Brecht Forum)
-Prison education: liberation and cooptation (Progressive Education Initiative)
-Teaching Assata at Riker’s Island (CUNY professor Tony Gronowicz)

We invite you to contribute workshops relating to this Free U’s theme. Some suggestions:
*Political Resistance – Stop Stop & Frisk; know-your-rights training; stories of Assata Shakur and other political prisoners and exiles in the U.S. and around the world.
*Education Resistance – votes of no confidence; test boycotts; student strikes; decolonizing curriculum and classrooms; halting the school-to-prison pipeline and school closures.
*Spaces of Resistance – prisoners’ struggles; campaigns to end immigrant raids and deportations; housing and financial rights workshops.

Come to our next planning meeting!
June 8 – 12pm – City Hall Park fountain (enter Park Row and Beekman st, Manhattan)
We invite you to take active part in coordinating this event. Any and all skills in dialogue facilitation, community outreach, online publicity, video/audio documentation, event logistics, info table welcoming & support, food preparation, and more are heartily welcome.

Email FreeUniversityNYC@gmail.com for more information.

Info links:
www.AssataTeachIn.com
www.DemocracyNow.org/2013/5/3/angela_davis_and_assata_shakurs_lawyer
www.DemocracyNow.org/2013/5/3/assata_shakur_in_her_own_words
www.FreeUniversityNYC.org
www.BrechtForum.org

This Sat 6/1 @12pm- planning mtg for Sat 6/15 Free U on Assata Shakur, political prisoners & exiles, and resisting state repression

This Saturday, 12pm, at Cooper Square Park (E 7th st and 3rd ave, Manhattan), you’re invited to help plan an exciting mid-June collaboration…

Free University-NYC/Brecht Forum folks will host a special solidarity Free University on the life and legacy of Assata Shakur, political prisoners and exiles, and resisting state repression.
Saturday afternoon, June 15, location TBA. Save the date!

Come help coordinate this event where friends, families, comrades, and community groups can learn and share about these social issues that have been addressed for almost three decades at the Brecht Forum and since Free U’s inception on May Day 2012. The time for free radical education is now more critical than ever–let’s work together to create it across NYC.

More details, teach-in/workshop contribution form, publicity coming soon. Please spread the word and check back again.

Info links:
Assata Shakur in her own words.
Democracy Now! with updated information on Assata’s case, featuring Angela Davis and Lennox Hinds.
Assata Teach-in’ open solidarity call.

Stay connected:
FreeUniversityNYC.org
email: FreeUniversityNYC@gmail.co
BrechtForum.org
email: BrechtForum@BrechtForum.org