Abolitionist CAM Morris to lead the first in-person teach-in for The School for Black Feminist Politics on Black Ecology in Washington, D.C.

Collage by Doriana Diaz.

Abolitionist CAM Morris to lead the first-in person teach-in for The School for Black Feminist Politics on Black Ecology in Washington, D.C.


Join us for our first in-person teach-in for the School for Black Feminist Politics! Led by community organizer and abolitionist, CAM Morris, the teach-in, “Black Ecology: Finding our Homes–Niggas be Everywhere”, will be held on Saturday, September 24 at 6 PM EST at Nubian Hueman, located at 1231 Good Hope Rd SE, Washington, D.C.

You can register for the event here. The event is free and open to the public. ASL interpretation will be provided.

About the teach-in: This teach-in will ask you to use historical context, Black stewardship, and nuance when engaging in conversations about land liberation and rights. We will discuss the history of Black land liberation, resistance occupations, Black nationalism, contemporary efforts toward environmental justice, and situate this fight within the context of Black people within occupied Piscataway and Anacostia land (District of Columbia). We will consider the erasure of Black experiences as a way to further investigate the spiritual and sustainable implications of land liberation. The connection between global land colonization and current fights for climate justice, repro justice, and housing justice.

About CAM Morris: Originally from the southside of Chicago, now residing in Washington, DC, (occupied Piscataway land) CAM (they/them) is a neuroexpansive, non-binary Black radical community organizer. Holding a Black queer feminist and abolitionist politic, the focus of CAM’s work is combatting colonization and neoliberalism, against US occupation and war, patriarchal violence, and capitalism.

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