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John C. Burkhardt
 

 
A message from Board Member John C. Burkhardt:
Allied&Active:
Answering the Call to Action

By John C. Burkhardt (KNFP-10)

While sometimes anyone of us can occasionally find ourselves out on a limb, I seldom feel entirely alone in the work I do. Many times, I have Kellogg Fellows to thank for that.

If it is a challenge related to undocumented students and their fair treatment, I can always rely on Jaime Chahin (KNFP-13) or Leslye Orloff (KNFP-14). If I need advice on how to work more effectively with a colleague, Dan Mulhern (KNFP-14) is often helpful. If my spirit needs lifting, there is Eva Moya (KNFP-13) or Reggie Nichols (KILP-02); and if my ego needs trimming....well there are many fellows quite capable in helping me with that too!

KFLA Trip to Cuba Will Focus on Race, Legacies of Slavery

About the Trip: June 18–25th, 2017. Cuba and the African Diaspora: Legacies and Realties. An 8-day experiential study trip to travel and learn. The mission of this Travel & Learn is to introduce and expose participants to the historical origins of the African Diaspora in Cuba through an intensive on-site engagement of the island’s culture, history, and structural continuities from the nineteenth century to the present. Led by Evelyn Hu-DeHart (KNFP-V) and Reynaldo Ortiz-Minaya.

About Evelyn Hu-DeHart and Reynaldo Ortiz

QA evelyn duhart reynaldo ortiz photo1

Evelyn Hu-DeHart is a KNFP Group V fellow. She teaches Latin American and Caribbean history at Brown University. In 2014–15, she directed the Brown Study Abroad program in Havana, and has been visiting and doing research in Cuba since the late 1980s, a witness to all the major changes and transformations of this island nation. She led KFLA’s 2016 trip to Cuba.

Reynaldo Ortiz-Minaya is a historian of the Caribbean with special emphasis on slavery and penal systems in the Spanish Atlantic. His doctoral dissertation examined the development of the sugar industry in Cuba during the 19th Century and the connections to slavery and the commodification of the island. He teaches Caribbean history at the City University of New York-Brooklyn College, where he works on questions of race and ethnicity, plantation economies and penal landscapes in Latin America and the Caribbean. He has been leading groups to Cuba for over twenty years.

How has race played out in Cuba’s past?

Reynaldo: People were brought directly to Cuba from Africa as slaves, and also ended up in Cuba as a result of the Haitian Revolution in Saint Domingue in 1804. Plantation owners transplanted slaves and the infrastructure of large-scale sugar production. 

Historically speaking — since a few years after the Revolution in 1959 — race has been a controversial topic within Cuban society. While the Revolution has accomplished amazing feats within the confines of medicine and education, the issue of race and racism still stands. We know that you can’t deconstruct 250 years of racism because the Revolution said so.

The fragility of race remains an important question in Cuba; it’s an extremely hot and debatable topic, not only within academic circles, but also on a social levels. Serious changes are taking place on the island because of increasing tourism, as well as other pre-exiting historical factors. Cuban society is experiencing a conjuncture: Is race going to be a more difficult process to understand or lead to a more open and genuine social discussion?

What is the applicability of race history/relations in Cuba to the American experience?

Reynaldo: There is a direct relation between the African-American struggle and the Cuban struggle before the Revolution. There were individuals who moved back and forth between Black Harlem, Philadelphia, Key West, New Orleans, and Cuba. As far back as 1865 — at the time of the American Civil War — you find networks of people in Cuba and the U.S. interacting. The period of the Harlem Renaissance was particularly active. We hope to clarify that this connection is not post-Revolution, but pre-dates the Revolution.

Evelyn: As Reynaldo said, there has always been communication between Cuba and New York and New Orleans. It was pretty easy to get from Cuba to New Orleans and from Cuba to New York. There were many individuals who were traveling and in communication. Southern plantation owners had explicit connections with Cuba. After the American Civil War, Southern plantation owners went to Cuba to run sugar plantations. They used Cuban slaves and Coolie labor.

What are some of the things participants can expect in the upcoming trip?

Evelyn: Participants will certainly learn about the intellectual and background history of race and slavery in Cuba, but we’ll be on the ground and engaging in experiential history. And we’re not just visiting plantations and rural areas. In Havana, for example, we’ll be going to working class and heavily Afro-Cuban neighborhoods. We’ll be visiting neighborhoods that tourists never see.

Reynaldo: The group will be exposed in an intense way to the development of the sugar industry in 19th century. They will learn how it was related to New York banking. In 1837, the railroad was introduced in Cuba. It was the first built in all of Latin America. It was built to transport support the sugar industry and its vast global network.

The individual who financed the operation was Moses Taylor. He made so much money that he founded the National City Bank of New York; it later became known as Citibank. At Harvard University there is a 986-page volume dedicated to Moses Taylor, but not one mention of the Cuban slavery and the Cuban sugar that created his wealth.

We’ll visit a former plantation where family members of slave descendants live in the same barracks that their families lived in as slaves. We want our group to see and experience the historical connection — and on the ground connection — to the Afro-Cuban realities on the island.

Are the social and economic changes on Cuba increasing racial equality?

Evelyn: Some say racial equality is getting worse due to the increase of tourism. Others disagree.

Reynaldo: We want to invite people to be able to learn about the history that has not been told...and to correct the history that has been incorrectly produced. Cuban history and Cuban society is an Africanized history and society.

We’ll be looking at the generational advantages that Afro-Cubans haven’t had access to because of the deeply embedded history of racism and colonialism. This will be challenging; it may cause emotional and mental discomfort. However, we must confront that to understand who are we, where are we going, and where came from.

We’ll also discuss how religion facilitates that memory. We know that from a top-down perspective, government instructs that there is no structural racism. Therefore, individuals have no recourse to challenge the state or make their claims known. On a social level, this is a much different reality and a quite painful history that has to be embraced and yet dealt with head-on.

Evelyn: In spite of all this history (of racism) in both the United States and Cuba, there has been an appropriation of Afro-American and Afro-Cuban cultural tradition by the dominant society. That’s been through religion, the arts and in other areas. We appropriate what we want to embellish what we are, without addressing structural concerns. “What contributions to civilization have people of color ever made?” Steve King, a Congressional representative from Iowa, expressed this recently. What he is expressing and articulating is what’s on a lot of people’s mind in this country.

We’ll try to see the linkages between the present and the past not just in Cuba, but also in our own society. We don’t always see our society clearly until we look through another prism.

Reynaldo: We’ll be examining the history of Afro-Cubans in medicine and education. There’s the Latin American School of Medicine (ELAM) where U.S. students are obtaining a medical education in Cuba because they cannot afford to attend medical school in the United States. We’ll also be considering how increased tourism is impacting the Cuban food system. Word on the street is that Cuba is no longer going to be able to maintain organic production to meet tourism needs, and that some producers will need to switch over to conventional, larger scale production.

Evelyn: A great deal of the “good food” is going to tourist restaurants. There are long lines for food. We’ll learn more about this.

Any final thoughts you’d like to offer about the trip?

Evelyn: We’ll be visiting sites that are deeply interesting, historically significant and of personal interest. We’ll be exploring music, religion and culture. It will be a great group of people and a wonderful offering of activities. We’ll be combining a serious study tour with deep discussion of critical issues, but we’ll also do a considerable amount of sightseeing, visiting lots of neighborhoods, getting to know Cuba to some degree.

Reynaldo: We have nearly a dozen speakers lined up that will help our group deeply engage with the Afro-Cuban experience in education, nutrition, medicine and other areas. The group will come away with a very deep and critical understanding of the changing nature of Cuban society and specifically the challenges held by marginalized populations on the island.

Editor's Note: This article was originally published by the UC Food Observer and is re-published here with permission.

It just seems that whenever one of us is "called to action" that there are others who can be there with us. Sometimes the help is given through advice, collaboration or encouragement. Sometimes the help comes from someone who challenges our assumptions or tells us to revisit our limitations.

When one of us is called, the answer can be resounding.

Not long ago, a Kellogg Fellow colleague and I were discussing the topic of courage as an increasingly rare attribute of leaders, especially those who find themselves in hotly contentious circumstances. I knew from our previous time together that he had not only served as a policeman, union official and leader of a non-profit association, he also had battled back from a terrible health challenge. When he spoke of courage, I felt he knew what it meant.

I compared his stories to those of Betty Overton (KNFP-09) and Kent Wong (KNFP-10), two individuals with whom I work closely on social justice initiatives. Each of them, and the many other fellows who have become my allies and friends in so many shared efforts, all seem to have experienced times of trial, times when they have come under attack, and times of personal doubt.

Every one of us seems to have worked out an approach to deal with the public bombardment and the private pressures that come from attempting change in big, heavily guarded systems.

This has been one of the most important and valued legacies of our fellowship programs.

In this spirit, when you are given a call to action by a Kellogg Fellow, like those you’ll find in this newsletter, remember — you are not alone.

Over the past year, I have used the Kellogg Fellows network to bring over 50 fellows to five events, where they have been thought partners in framing policy to tackle complex issues of health, equity, justice, and education. Our network has tremendous resources to address today’s challenges — I invite you to join me in bringing the power of collaborative partnerships with Kellogg Fellows to bear on your work and your communities.

Cordially,
John C. Burkhardt

KFLA Board Member
Director, National Center for Institutional Diversity
Professor of Clinical Practice, Center for the Study of Higher and Postsecondary Education

Watch Live: Kellogg Fellows meet with UN Under Secretary General


In conjunction with the Global Networks Forum on Advancing Women’s Leadership, KFLA is hosting a roundtable discussion with Kellogg Fellow Dr. Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, Under-Secretary-General and Executive Director of UN Women.

You're invited to join us via our free global livestream! Ready to join? Want to host a watch party with other fellows? Find out more »

Cuba Travel & Learn 2016

Cuba in Changing Times, July 2016
Havana, Cuba | Join KFLA, in partnership with trip leader Evelyn Hu-DeHart (KNFP-05), for an experiential and educational, 9-day journey to Cuba.

 
Call to Action

Call to Action programs unite Fellows around a specific issue, provide opportunities for intense learning and dialogue, and launch action-driven collaborative initiatives.

The 2016 Call to Action programs will be around the following themes:

  • Supporting Children in Indigenous Communities
  • Rural Issues
  • Immigration Reform

Volunteers: We are looking for Fellows to volunteer their time and expertise on planning committees for these programs. Please email martha@kfla.org for details.

 

Program Opportunities at a Glance

UPCOMING PROGRAMS: REGISTER TODAY

FEB
25, 2016

Thought Leader Series: Dr. Oran Hesterman | Online
“Fair Food, Growing A Healthy Sustainable Food System For All” Register for webinar »

MAR
17, 2016

Thought Leader Series: Dr. Barbara Rogoff | Online
“Developing Destinies, A Mayan Midwife and Town” Register for webinar »

APR
7 - 30, 2016

Second Annual Global Day of Gratitude | Worldwide
Honor Mr. Will Keith Kellogg by giving back to your community. See how to participate »

APR
21, 2016

Thought Leader Series: Dr. Manuel Pastor | Online
“Equity Growth & Community” Register for webinar »

MAY
19, 2016

Thought Leader Series: Mr. Bryant Terry | Online
“Afro Vegan” Register for webinar »

MAY
25 - 26, 2016

Call to Action | Ann Arbor, Michigan
Participate in dialogues and help launch action-driven collaborative initiatives in immigration issues.

MAY
31, 2016

Launch of The Mink’a | Online
Mink’a means “communal work” in Quechua, an Amerind language. Learn more about the details and structure that will support Fellows-helping-Fellows in communities across the globe.

JUN
12 - 18, 2016

Ecotourism | Oaxaca, México
A one-week cultural, educational and relaxing trip in the middle of nature and of the “Pueblos Mancomunados”. Register Today »

JUL
5 - 9, 2016

Call to Action | El Paso, Texas
Participate in dialogues and help launch action-driven collaborative initiatives in rural issues.

JUL
14 - 22, 2016

Cuba in Changing Times | Havana, Cuba
Participate in an experiential and educational 9-day journey to Cuba. Learn more »

OCT
6 - 9, 2016

Forum 2016 | Denver, CO
With your input, we are convening Kellogg Fellows for Forum 2016 this coming fall in Denver to focus on Putting our Children First. Read more and get involved »

 
Forum2016

A year ago we asked you: is it time for another Forum? A resounding 221 of you responded “Yes!” and told us what would make great Forum 2016.

Today we are pleased to announce that, with your input, and in partnership with the W.K. Kellogg Foundation’s innovative focus on Putting Children First, we are convening Kellogg Fellows for Forum 2016 this coming fall in Denver.

 
 
Ecotourism & Pueblos Mancomunados


Oaxaca, Mexico | KFLA, in partnership with Expeditions Sierra Norte, invites you to the Zapotec communities to learn the process of responsible use of natural resources and forest conservation. Dates TBD

 

Network in Action

Reception for Congresswoman Alma Adams

Our thanks to Dr. George Pruitt, President of the Thomas Edison State College for co-hosting a reception for U.S. Congresswoman Alma Adams, Class KNFP-11. Congresswoman Adams was sworn into office on November 12, 2014, becoming the 100th woman in the 113th Congress.

Read More

FELLOWS RECONNECTING: KNFP Class VI Reunion

"Do you agree that our collective and individual journeys are worthy of celebration?" This was the question posed to us by Kevin Fichensher regarding the journey we began 30 years ago as Group 6 of the KNFP. Our answer, of course, was a resounding yes.

Read More

Call to Bloggers


Do you write for a blog? Would you like to share your ideas with other Kellogg Fellows?

Send an email to info@kfla.org with the link and a brief description of your existing blog to be featured on the Kellogg Fellows Community just like the ones below:

What themes/topics would you like to see in the KFLA blog? Send an email to patricia@kfla.org if you would like to write an article for the network.

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IN THIS ISSUE:

Board Member's Letter
Kellogg Fellows respond to calls to action

Program Opportunities at a Glance
Request information or register for our exciting, new programs

Travel & Learn: Cuba in Changing Times
See details and register for next year's Travel & Learn opportunity in Havana, Cuba

Travel & Learn: Mexico
Make your voice heard: express your interest in a potential Travel & Learn program in Mexico

Forum 2016
With your input, we are convening Kellogg Fellows for Forum 2016 this coming fall in Denver to focus on Putting our Children First

Reception for Congresswoman Alma Adams
A Kellogg fellow became the 100th Woman in the 113th Congress — See photos and details from the reception

Fellows Reconnecting
Learn about the Fellow-run reunion hosted by KNFP Class VI for KNFP Class VI

Kellogg Fellows meet with UN Under Secretary General
KFLA and the Global Networks Forum on Advancing Women’s Leadership will host a roundtable meeting featuring the UN Under-Secretary-General