Chatham-Savannah Citizen Advocacy

Keeping the social in social change

The Citizen Blog...

Category archives for Uncategorized »

Join us Thursday, May 12th for Annual Covered Dish Supper

It’s Springtime and it’s time for our Annual Covered Dish Supper and Celebration at the Savannah Station… please join us for this celebration of our community and the personal action and advocacy by people involved in citizen advocacy relationships in our community.

 

Festivities start with a social hour from 5:30 – 6:30 p.m. with appetizers, wine and soft drinks on the patio and music by the band Soap. Bring a big covered dish to share and enjoy the huge covered dish supper from 6:30 – 7:30 p.m. Then it’s time for some Home Grown Good News – stories from from people involved in citizen advocacy from 7:30 – 8:30 p.m. Children will enjoy listening to the music during the social hour and then can visit the activities table hosted by Maggie’s Morning School teachers.

 

The evening opens and closes with some group singing – brush up on the lyrics of “Imagine” and “Lean on Me” and you will be ready to sing along!

 

Please bring a big covered dish to share or $5 at the door. We hope you will join us for this celebration of community and personal action to help make Savannah a great place to live for all citizens.

 

We hope to see you there!

Save the Date – Thursday, May 12th- Annual Covered Dish Supper

Mark your calendar for Thursday, May 12 from 5:30 – 8:30 p.m. at the Savannah Station at 601 Cohen Street. Appetizers and the band Soap for social hour on the patio from 5:30 – 6:30. The biggest and best covered dish supper in Chatham Country from 6:30 – 7:30 (bring a covered dish to share). Home Grown Good News: Stories from citizen advocates from 7:30 – 8:30 p.m. Children are welcome!

*Thanks to Andrew Davies of Paragon Design Group for graphic design services!

Looking forward to the new year…

As we end the year I thought I might offer some thoughts about the purpose we share under the banner of Chatham-Savannah Citizen Advocacy.

 

Our shared purpose is to provide protection to and advocacy for/with people who are marginalized because of prejudice toward disability.

 

We bring people who would not ordinarily meet into meaningful relationship with one another. We have done this for more than 30 years using a model called Citizen Advocacy.

 

We do this so that people who live isolated lives, lives that are only witnessed by paid staff persons, or sometimes by no person, will have someone who is voluntarily and intentionally in their corner.

 

We do this so that people who live big busy lives can be in solidarity with someone whose life looks different on the outside, with the hope that they will discover that they share many of the same hopes, dreams and needs on the inside, inside their souls. We call this identification, when the advocate identifies with the life, the soul of the other person.

 

We do this as a way to encourage both people to be the most they can be as human beings.

 

This is an idea that can have great strength and fragility. It is an idea that becomes real as people find ways to be together, working on practical matters as well as finding ways to share pleasure and enjoyment.

 

As an organization we have to try and be curious about ourselves. It is easy to fall into unconscious busyness, missing the chance to refresh, re-frame and re-establish our passion.

 

As we start the New Year, let’s all work together to ask the important questions, create useful ideas, celebrate good news and make meaning out of all that comes our way.

 

Looking forward to a New Year !!!!

What’s it like to be a citizen advocate? What’s it like to have a citizen advocate?

Tom Kohler asked several long time citizen advocates and several protege’s matched with citizen advocates in Savannah to share their insights with some folks newly involved…

 

What does it feel like to be an advocate? What would you want prospective advocates, or people very newly involved to hear?

 

“You really don’t know very much about what you are supposed to be doing. The stakes can be high, the issues you are negotiating and speaking to are new to you. I was simply scared of not doing the right thing.”

 

“I was not trusted. The man I met had been let down so many times, in so many ways and for almost his whole life. I felt fearful of failing by letting him down again. I also was looking too far down the road at first, trying to figure out more than I could, or even should. I had three basic feelings: fear. confusion and confidence. Confidence that I knew enough people, knew how to do things and that the man I’d met and I had enough in common that something reasonable would work out.”

 

“In the beginning, I felt resented by my protégé’s family. Life and lifestyle for everyone had become predictable. Now I’m listening to my protégé who has a new dream, and both the dream and me are now being resented by his family.”

 

“At first my intellect was in charge. Then my emotions took over and I knew there was no going back. I also began to go step by step on the issues my protégé faced, which helped me feel less overwhelmed. I also began to realize and acknowledge the positive changes in my own life that were coming from this. The idea of receiving and giving became so real.”

 

“I remember getting scared. I became more serious when I learned about the realities of how strong some people’s biases and prejudices were and of how so many of my protégé’s life experiences matched the discussions about the wounds of devalued people I was having with the staff.”

 

“At first I focused on an issue, a task. As we waited for that to be resolved, we began to feel the relationship part grow. Seeing a movie together, the sharing of meals also became important.”

 

“My protégé and I really began to share emotions. His hurts really began to become my hurts, his victories mine. He began to experience my life in the same way. How I was doing was important to him.”

 

“Overtime, I’d say that I’ve gone from thinking the tasks at hand are the most important and now feel like it’s the person and the relationship that matter the most. It helps to listen to what the person is saying, often taking their direction and breaking it down into action steps.”

 

What does it feel like to have a citizen advocate?

 

“I was wondering how we could connect. Here’s this business man from a different world than I live in. I was wondering, ‘What is right to expect, to hope for? Am I asking too much? Where’s the limit? I don’t want to cross the line.’ I’ve had what I call traditional relationships that come through family and church. I’ve been struck by the clear feeling that my advocate is on my side, rather than someone who is always assessing my position and second-guessing my point of view. The intentionality, the clarity of the advocate’s willingness, makes it easier to ask for help. I hate asking for help.”

 

“Being asked to tell my whole life story to the coordinator was great. Piecing it together, editing it, and getting it right so that the prospective advocate would hear it clearly helped me feel more confident.”

 

“It’s commonalities, not disability, that this is built around. Everyone else is interested in my disabilities – not my life, not me. There was lots of communication back and forth before the first meeting and that helped me feel like I knew something about the advocate and he knew something about me before we met. At the first meeting I felt sincerity.”

Why We Went: Photos of the SNCC 50th Anniversary Conference

Join us for the Opening Reception for this photography show on Tuesday, November 2nd from 7:00 – 8:30 p.m. at the Sentient Beat at 13 E. Park Avenue.

 

In April of 2010, Shaw University in Raleigh, North Carolina hosted a historic gathering to commemorate the founding of one of the most influential and effective civil rights organizations, the Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee- better known as SNCC (pronounced Snick.) The conference, held on the exact dates and place of it’s founding 50 years earlier, promised to bring together some of the brightest luminaries of the civil rights struggle. But more than that, among the conference’s goals was the thoughtful consideration of how to excite and activate youth to continue the struggle today.

 

A group of Savannahians who were not former members of SNCC traveled to Raleigh to attend. Some of us had been supporters of the struggle; some of us had been too young; some had not been born. Most share a connection to a local organization, Chatham-Savannah Citizen Advocacy which brings people together around the issues of social justice. Our concern for human rights includes persons with disabilities.

 

We trace the lineage of the movement for rights of people with disabilities directly from the civil rights movement: the struggle in our country’s recent history where people were willing, and did die for their beliefs. In awe of the bravery of our heroic brothers and sisters in the struggle, we wanted to meet them, listen to them, learn from them. We were not disappointed.

 

These photos by Ann Curry, Susan Earl and Sunny Ingram show some of SNCC’s heroes, sung and unsung and some of the Savannahians who went to learn and celebrate.