Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What are your respective campus experiences on building coalitions with other multicultural groups? Include successes, pitfalls, and recommendations.

A: 

Response #1:

Coaltion building is an essential element of our collective movements for equality and justice. I use Suzanne Pharr as a prime example in her discussions about the early Women's Movement which was not inclusive of women of color or lesbians. Hence, we are decades behind where we could have been, had we all worked together!

For this reason, we need to meet and form not only working relationships with people and groups of people of color, people with disabilities, international students, Hillel, youth, elderly, and so forth, but form "meaningful" relationships with people in organizations who work with these issues day in and day out, just as we work with GLBT issues. On the UMD Campus, our student organization is 99% white. There is little cultural diversity within the group. We are also a homogeneous university population. Outreach to other multicultural organizations is a key element of successful organizing.

As Director of GLBT Services on campus, my closest allies are the directors of:

African-American Learning Resource Center
Asian Pacific Learning Resource Center
Hipanic/Latino/Chicana Learning Resource Center
Access Center (for people with disabilities)
International Student Adviser

I am lucky because most of us are co-located in the Campus Center and are able to serve each other's respective groups/students in one another's absence. I wouldn't think of designing a program without their input or co-sponsorship. We work together collaboratively with the hopes that our students will do the same, so we help them by programming together.

We began the year with two rules as Directors of Multicultural Learning Resources and GLBT Services:

  1. Agree to Disagree
  2. Try to be comfortable with the discomfort of learning about each other and,
  3. Forgive our own mistakes and those of others….
  4. Celebrate our successes!

As a result, we're doing quite well….hope this helps.

Angela C. Nichols, Director
Gay Lesbian Bisexual Transgender Services
University of Minnesota Duluth

Response #2:

We've built coalitions through events. with OASIS (our office for students of color), African Heritage Month, Deutsches Haus (German Cultural House), the Bronfman Center for Jewish Student Life, and the Spiritual Diversity Network - the following events are some examples:

  • The Curious Connection Between the Black Church and Homosexuality (lecture)
  • Letta Neely lecture - she spoke on the needs for the queer movement to include EVERYONE
  • screening of the movie "Paragraph 175" (about homosexuals in the holocaust)
  • book reading with the authors of Independence Park - about gay men in Israel
  • book reading with Gad Beck - gay holocaust survivor
  • discussion with an out rabbi and an out epoiscopal minister
  • Kabildo del Arte - performance and art exhibit by local queer Latino/as
  • Keep It on the DL - panel discussion about the crossing of hip-hop and queer cultures followed by a concert by a queer hip-hop group

most of these have been pretty successful - and have brought out a diverse audience, which is always really exciting. let me know if you want more info

Todd M. Smith
Coordinator, Office of LGBT Student Services
New York University

Response #3:

It seems like one of the things we need to do is acknowledge & work on racism in our communities. Eg., unlearning racism/sexism workshops, etc.

We also need to support programs that work to end oppressions of other kinds, too. Eg., if we support programs that educate people about affirmative action and its importance we're taking active steps against institutional and cultural racism. The more we (especially white people) do things to support communities of color, the more trustworthy we'll be.

Many groups of color have rightly been suspicious of predominantly white GLBT organizations & people. We (white people) need to demonstrate our commitment to ending oppression in words & actions. When we truly are allies in the struggle against oppression, the people that we are in solidarity with will also come to our aid.

Beverly D. Tuel, Ph.D.
Director
Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual, Transgender Resource Center
University of Colorado, Boulder

Response #4:

Here at the University of Southern Maine the GLBTQA Resources Program collaborates a lot with both the Women's Resouces Program and Multicultural Services. (GLBTQA and Womens' Resources are located within the Division of Student Development and Multicultural is in the Office of Campus Diversity and Equity).

What has been important in our collaboration efforts has been the philosophy of addressing oppression - shared oppressions. One of the programs that Multicultural does is Dialogues in Diversity which trains student ambassadors to talk about issues of oppression - racism, sexism, heterosexism, ageism, ableism, ethnocentrism, urbanism, etc. This concept makes it easy to collaborate with one another's programs.

The GLBTQA program is still fairly new and we hope to work with Multucultural Resources a lot more in the next year - Queer of Color Forums and discussion groups, etc. Combined programming for Black Awareness Month, Asian American Month, etc.

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