Race & Equity in Yoga: Disruption As a Practice

Race & Equity in Yoga: Disruption As a Practice Facilitated by Kelley Palmer

$125-250 sliding scale | Enrollment opens August 10th

Tuesdays and Thursdays: August 18
, 20, 25 & 27
  |  All 4 sessions are 9:00am-12:00pm PST (12pm-3pm EST)

Find detailed schedule below.

Enrollment is OPEN!

When you register via our registration link you help Accessible Yoga support Integral Yoga San Francisco as an affiliate. Thank you!

About the Course:

This course, Race & Equity in Yoga: Disruption As a Practice, is not simply an intellectual conversation about racism that leaves you even more confused about what to do.

It’s not a list of resources and books to read that leave you even more confused about your lane and how to stay in it.

Get clear on your role in dismantling white supremacy and activate your yoga practice for social justice. Start working toward the future you believe in with practical tools for self-study, dealing with uncomfortable conversations, and finding your focus. An interactive, live, 12-hour training to help yoga teachers understand the mechanisms and impacts of systemic racism, work towards sustainable solutions, and take responsibility for dismantling white supremacy in yoga.

We’ve created a space where you can come as you are, have the space to make mistakes, and learn and grow with other folks on this path. You can shift and expand your perspective. You can step into your power and create change. You can lean fully into a more equitable future in and out of wellness spaces.

The murder of George Floyd during the global COVID-19 pandemic has catalyzed the largest civil rights movement in America’s history. The movement for Black lives has become front-and-center news. Widespread demonstrations, protests, and uprisings are causing our state and local governments to take a hard look at the role policing and prisons play in our society and the ways that resources are hoarded and unequally distributed among our citizens.

It is clear. A shift is necessary. But let’s be real: this isn’t a new problem. And since the dynamics of society are always replicated in our institutions, every industry from fashion to wellness is reckoning with its issues around race, equity, and social justice.

And since the dynamics of our institutions show up in our relationships, maybe you are finding yourself here, just one person, a yoga teacher, knowing you need to be part of this shift toward a more equitable world, but unsure of how to move forward.

 

Kelley Palmer is a writer, wellness advocate and community organizer committed to using the tools and philosophies of yoga to cultivate liberation, joy and peace for herself and others. Her connection to the living practice of yoga, a path of mindful wellness and self realization fuels her work, impacts her life and propels her to want to share it with others through her writing, events and guest teaching opportunities. She remains focused on making this healing practice accessible to all, connecting to communities that are normally excluded or ignored in mainstream wellness circles.

Being a mother of two liberated souls has created a point of focus that brings these tools to the way she is mothering them and also calling her to share this with all parents. Through in person and online offerings, Kelley centers her work on making these connections with authentic and sustainable tool building. Her writing, offerings and more about her can be found at www.peacefilledmama.com.

 

Schedule details:

Tuesday, August 18
, 9:00am-12:00pm PST (12pm-3pm EST)
Community Creation
We will focus on building a collaborative community including:
• Introductions of the facilitator and participants
• Building community agreements
• Seated Movement
• Guided Meditation
• Tools to lean into discomfort
• Guided Writing Exercises

Thursday, August 20, 
9:00am-12:00pm PST (12pm-3pm EST)
Systems of Oppression Within Yoga Communities
We will focus on deepening our understanding of systems of oppression including:
• Building understanding of key terms
• Examining how this manifests on our work/communities
• Examining our personal histories on this system
• Group discussions of our collective experience
• Identifying our privilege and access
• Seated Movement
• Guided meditation
• Self Study Invitations
Tuesday, August 25, 9:00am-12:00pm PST (12pm-3pm EST)
Understanding Our Responsibility
We will focus on understanding our responsibility to shift culture including:
• Examining strategies for dismantling systems of oppression
• Identifying our individual practices to lean into activism
• Deepening our individual connections to liberation practices
• Investigating our part on upholding systems of oppression
• Questioning our held beliefs and practices
• Guided Meditation
• Self Study Questions
• Group Discussion
Thursday, August 27
, 9:00am-12:00pm PST (12pm-3pm EST)
Sustainable Solutions
We will focus on cultivating sustainable tools to move us forward including:
• Setting individual and collective intentions
• Cultivating tools to continue our self study
• Creating language shifts for our spaces and lives
• Resource sharing
• Question and Answer for final review
• Guided Meditation
• Seated Movement
• Self Study Reflection
• Group Discussion

2020-08-21T15:43:32-07:00July 27th, 2020|Tags: , |

Responding to Racism Discussion Group

Free | Monthly, on the fourth Sunday
Please register in advance, a zoom link will be provided via confirmation email.

Please join us for exploration of the roots of racism and the changes we need to see in ourselves and society.
The discussion will be guided by the books White Fragility by Robin DiAngelo and Mindful of Race by Ruth King. We will use these books and other resources to spark discussion and deep looking at ourselves and our culture. White Fragility by Robin DiAngelo is available in ebook and audiobook (free on youtube) and from your libraries.

Send any questions to info@spiritualactioninitiative.org

Next meeting and book pages will be announced in the class.

 

Sarani Beth Fedman, C-IAYT, RYT-500, is a co-founder of The Spiritual Action Initiative (SAI), which brings together individuals committed to working for social justice for all beings and for the care and healing of our natural world. Guided by spiritual values such as nonviolence, compassion and truthfulness, we are dedicated to bringing needed changes through personal practice, education and action, and by advocating for policy changes in government, corporations and other organizations.
Sarani is a long time yogi who has studied, practiced and taught yoga for over 20 years. Most of her teacher training was completed at Yogaville, Virginia, the home of Satchidananda Ashram. She has received her yoga teacher certification from Yoga Alliance at the RYT500 level and is a certified yoga therapist through the International Association of Yoga Therapists.

2020-08-17T09:54:54-07:00July 7th, 2020|Tags: |

Responding to Racism Discussion Group

 

Free | Monthly (fourth Sundays)

Please join us for exploration of the roots of racism and the changes we need to see in ourselves and society.
Our first discussion will be based on the beginning 3 chapters of “White Fragility: Why It Is So Hard For White People To Talk About Racism” by Robin DiAngelo (Foreward-pp.38). We will use this book and other resources to spark discussion and deep looking at ourselves and our culture. The book is available in ebook and audio book (free on youtube) and from your libraries. Contact Sarani at thefedmans@gmail.com with any questions.

Next meeting will take place on August 23rd (pages 39-88 of the DiAngelo book)

 

Sarani Beth Fedman, C-IAYT, RYT-500, is a co-founder of The Spiritual Action Initiative (SAI), which brings together individuals committed to working for social justice for all beings and for the care and healing of our natural world. Guided by spiritual values such as nonviolence, compassion and truthfulness, we are dedicated to bringing needed changes through personal practice, education and action, and by advocating for policy changes in government, corporations and other organizations.
Sarani is a long time yogi who has studied, practiced and taught yoga for over 20 years. Most of her teacher training was completed at Yogaville, Virginia, the home of Satchidananda Ashram. She has received her yoga teacher certification from Yoga Alliance at the RYT500 level and is a certified yoga therapist through the International Association of Yoga Therapists.

2020-07-22T17:48:03-07:00July 5th, 2020|Tags: |

Spiritual Activism in a Violent World

In the wake of yet another gross example of racism and another senseless murder in the U.S., many people I know are searching for some way to actively respond to a world that has given birth to so much violence and injustice. In Integral Yoga, we often speak about how we can embody the spiritual principles and practices we embrace in proactive ways to make a real difference.  

For far too long, many committed spiritual seekers I know have limited their response to sending prayers for peace, expressing their dismay to each other, and recommitting themselves to spiritual practice to establish peace in their hearts. These are all very important choices, but right now I don’t think they are enough. These actions are invisible to the world around us—I saw a protest sign recently that read, “Silence is Violence.” Spiritual practice should lay the groundwork for further action.

It is crucial that we sustain a regular meditation practice to touch the ground of being we all share and to awaken the natural compassion that arises in the heart when we experience this interconnection. Understood in this context, our spiritual practice is a responsibility, not simply a personal pursuit. Only then, will this sense of oneness be strong enough that it manifests in our hearts and minds as we interact in the world. 

But we need not wait for some level of enlightenment to take Yoga off the cushion or mat and into the street. We can purposely practice moving, talking, and thinking with peace and compassion in our hearts. 

We bring compassion into conversations when we listen deeply to another person and make a real effort to understand and respect their needs, instead of stubbornly defending our own. We can approach even those with whom we disagree with an open heart and an effort to build on the common ground we share, instead of focusing only on the differences.  

At every opportunity, we must speak out against injustice when we see, hear, or witness it and be a presence of peace in moments of conflict. Even when we cannot help directly, we can offer support to those who are fighting against racism and violence. We must make our voices heard to those seeking election, so that policies that support social justice are enacted at every level of government.

We must stand in solidarity with the voices of BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and People of Color) stating that systematic racism and injustice due to police violence must end. We cannot just stand by and watch the murder of George Floyd, Breonna Taylor, Ahmaud Arbery, and the many others who have suffered from our country’s failure to address the racial inequality that has plagued our society for centuries.

We must also speak up against the derogatory language, hate speech, and acts of violence directed at Asian populations since the outbreak of the pandemic. I’ve read more than once that we must act now to strengthen the immunity of our societies, not only against COVID-19, but against the virus of hate and discrimination.

A recent message from the Interfaith Council of San Francisco articulates our intention to join with many others in supporting changes that value all peoples, regardless of race, eradicate all forms of oppression, and recognize the unity behind all diversity.

“The overwhelming national response to George Floyd’s death, manifested in peaceful protests, not only honors his life, but powerfully expresses the threshold of tolerance we as Americans have reached for injustice, systematic racism and discrimination against people of color. This powerful resurgence of a long overdue civil rights movement will not be silenced until structural change is realized. We lift our voices and stand in unity and solidarity with our sisters and brothers of color in proclaiming that BLACK LIVES MATTER.” —Interfaith Council of San Francisco

For the last 2 months, the residents of the Integral Yoga Institute here in San Francisco have been gathering to send out prayers for all those who are suffering from the pandemic. We will continue to do so and keep equally in our prayers all those suffering from racial injustice.  We also commit to educating ourselves to uncover unintentional racism, to searching our own hearts for prejudice of any kind, and to using every opportunity to promote the yogic understanding that we are all one.

Please join us for a free panel and community discussion we will hold on Sunday, June 14, 4:30 – 6 pm PDT, entitled Responding to Racism – A Spiritual PerspectiveIntegral Yoga Minister Kamala Itzel Hayward will speak on the essential role that acknowledging racism and other forms of oppression plays in the spiritual journey. Mazin Jamal Mahgoub will follow with a talk on effective activism grounded in spiritual principles. 

Swami Ramananda is the President of the Integral Yoga Institute in San Francisco and a greatly respected senior teacher in the Integral Yoga tradition, who has been practicing Yoga for over 35 years. Ramananda offers practical methods of integrating the timeless teachings and practices of yoga into daily life, and transforming the painful aspects of human experience into steps toward realizing one’s full potential.

He leads beginner, intermediate and advanced level yoga teacher training programs in San Francisco, and offers a variety of programs in many locations in the U. S., Europe and South America. Ramananda trains Yoga teachers to bring Yoga into corporate, hospital and medical settings and has taught mind/body wellness programs in many locations. He is a founding board member of the Yoga Alliance, a national registry that supports and promotes yoga teachers as professionals. His warmth, wisdom and sense of humor have endeared him to many.

2020-06-07T14:58:33-07:00June 3rd, 2020|Tags: , |
Go to Top