Darien Library and YWCA Darien/Norwalk Welcome Racial Justice Educator, Author, Debby Irving on July 13

Waking up White: A Conversation on Bias, Privilege, and Racism

Darien Library and the YWCA Darien/Norwalk invite you to join author and racial justice educator Debby Irving for "Waking Up White: A Conversation on Bias, Privilege, and Racism." Meet Irving and learn about her journey on Monday, July 13th at 5 p.m. Register for this online event at https://dar.to/2YPhpkP.

Debby Irving's landmark book, Waking Up White and Finding Myself in the Story of Race, tells her story of unpacking her white privilege. Her sheltered, upper-middle class childhood in Massachusetts obscured the socially turbulent 60s and 70s from her view. She'd later contrast her experiences with that of her Darien-raised husband.

When she moved to Boston, she was horrified by the racial divide she witnessed. Yet, she did not know exactly what it was that was unsettling her when she thought about racial issues. In 2009, a class provided the Eureka moment. It led her to examine "the way being a member of the 'normal' race had interfered with my attempts to understand racism." From that point, she began her journey towards understanding her own racial innocence and educating "other white people confused and frustrated by racism by transforming their anxiety and inaction into empowerment and action."

The July 13 conversation will be followed by a community-wide reading of the book and for those who wish to participate, facilitated discussion groups which will meet throughout the summer and culminate in a reconvening in mid-September to explore lessons learned and next steps.

Debby Irving brings to racial justice the perspective of working as a community organizer and classroom teacher for 25 years without understanding racism as a systemic issue or her own whiteness as an obstacle to grappling with it. As general manager of Boston’s Dance Umbrella and First Night, and later as a classroom teacher in Cambridge, Massachusetts, she struggled to make sense of tensions she could feel but not explain in racially mixed settings. In 2009, a graduate school course, Racial and Cultural Identities, gave her the answers she’d been looking for and launched her on a journey of discovery. Debby now devotes herself to working with white people exploring the impact white skin can have on perception, problem-solving, and engaging in racial justice work. A graduate of the Winsor School in Boston, she holds a BA from Kenyon College and an MBA from Simmons College. Her book, Waking Up White, tells the story of how she went from well-meaning to well-doing and how she unpacked her own long-held beliefs about colorblindness, being a good person, and wanting to help people of color. She reveals how each of these well-intentioned mindsets actually perpetuated her ill-conceived ideas about race.

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Submitted by Darien, CT

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