Trans parent day was established in 2009 to celebrate transgender parents as well as the parents of transgender youth and to bring greater visibility to the unique challenges that non-traditional families face. To that end, SBJN is hosting a Super Ball Sunday, Tailgate Party on Nov 7th from 4-6 pm EST, and pre-game parent’s mixer from 3-4pm EST.
Weather permitting, we invite you to tune into our Zoom celebration from a local park, parking lot, or backyard for the full tailgate experience.
We choose to redefine tailgating in gender-expansive terms rather than the heteronormative masculine-centered way.
Southern Birth Justice Network supports, celebrates, and amplifies BIPOC trans people making a positive impact in their communities. We recognize that it is hard out there for individuals impacted by the stigma of race coupled with gender variance. It is during times like these that our organization offers its full support to celebrate the future-forward trailblazers paving the way to a bigger, brighter, and more inclusive tomorrow.
We will kick off with a speed mixer offering guests a chance to meet and greet in breakout rooms where they will have 3-minutes to answer questions in revolving small groups.
If you enjoy cooking, hosting, and prizes, we have the perfect contest for you!
Simply enter a photo of your “Trans Parent Day Tailgate Spread” and win a swag bag filled with prizes for your enjoyment.
Finalists will be called upon to share their culinary delights during the first half of our Super Ball Sunday celebration.
The winner will be selected by SBJN's own foodie Tifanny Burks.
We have opened a call to artists who wish to honor trans parents through creative expression. Walk, dance, perform or share a tribute story in a 3 min pre-recorded video and we will create and share a collective showreel for our viewing pleasure at our watch during half time.
We’ll hear from a panel of transgender and nonbinary parents in conversation about their experiences, lessons learned, parenting tips, and the issues impacting their lives, families, and rights.
Shhh it's a surprise!
Special tribute, and awards ceremony honoring transgender and non-binary parents.
SBJN is awarding cash prizes to transgender and non-binary parents making a difference in their communities.
Win a $500, $300 or $100 visa gift card for a trans hero you know that is leading the way to a better, more inclusive tomorrow.
SBJN is hosting a zoom meet up for young Moms to meet, greet, share parenting stories and hear from an esteemed panel. This is a Moms only cipher to access secrets to success and collective findings as we speak on our experiences - prenatal, postpartum, raising children, managing a household, while caring for our sanity. Moderators: Carmen Antonetty and Lanieyah Setticase
Explore the history and the ourstory of Black midwifery - hear from a leading panel on the ways in which birth workers are fighting to keep alive legacy and ancestral practice. From the frontline of birth and reproductive justice to the intimacy of home birth learn from leading maternal care experts and those advocating for Black women's health.
Moderator: Jamarah Amani
Panelists: Chanel Porchia, Carmen Mojica, Jessica Roach, Kimberly Durdin, Marquita Taylor, Sarahn Henderson, Na’imah Delpeche and Octavia Coleman
Get ready to get lit because we will be hosting a dance party that is guaranteed to make the mom in your life drop it like it’s hot. A DJ Named Sunshyne will be spinnin' sounds that will get the blood pumping in a feel-good celebration that honors the matriarchal lineage in our community. Meet mom on the zoom dance floor and let us take care of the rest! You’ll both be smiling with cherished memories to look back on.
This workshop will explore the rising maternal and infant mortality rates in this country, with a particular lens toward an intersectional analysis. This workshop will introduce participants to the Birth Justice framework through examining how pregnancy, birth and parenting intersect with social, racial and economic justice. Participants will have the opportunity to get involved with interactive methods and tools to engage with building the Birth Justice movement. Participants will strategize about how to utilize a radical approach to organizing education and access to birth options including midwifery care.
Introductory and comprehensive workshops about Birth Justice that can be tailored to your professional or community organization, healthcare center or school. Please Contact Us for more info.
Sites have included:
Sistersong
International Center for Traditional Childbearing
Midwives Alliance of North America
National College of Midwifery
Over two dozen conferences, local organizations and hospitals
SBJN's Circle of Mamas share their stories of birth and loss, speak on the challenges and rewards of parenting, and gain insight into birth justice organizing principles. This is a must see for young, expecting parents, and anyone who supports them!
SBJN offered our first Community Medic Training. Attendees were presented with hands-on life saving skills from midwives, doctors, first responders, and CPR specialists. Find out how you can help in an emergency!
This virtual training is for doulas OR anyone who is in an advocacy role, including pregnant mamas or their partner/family.
Doulas are non-medical birth professionals who provide support for pregnant, birthing and postpartum people. During the COVID-19 pandemic, that support is mostly virtual due to hospital restrictions.
Mamas giving birth with doula support are two times less likely to experience birth complications.
Doulas advocate to make sure their clients' voices are heard and medical information is communicated so that they understand and can make their own best choices for themselves and their babies.
Doulas are birth companions, and also support people through miscarriages, abortions and adoptions.
Doulas protect bodily autonomy in a system that consistently shows very little respect for pregnant and birthing people.
Doulas are a critical way that we can address racial disparities in maternal and newborn health. Also the advocacy tools and strategies used by doulas need to be accessible to every birthing person and their family during this time of uncertainty and shifting policies at birth facilities.
-The Birth Justice Bill of Rights
-Advocacy Tools for Doulas and Support People
-Changes to perinatal care during COVID-19 -How to apply these tools for the prenatal, birth or postpartum period
-Self-care and community care as an advocate
Enfrentándonos, Anti Blackness in Latinx Communities was a three-part virtual panel discussion series that featured young Afro-Latino speakers from Miami, Florida, Washington DC, New York City and beyond. Kitchen table conversation took center stage as we explored issues of identity, liberation, culture, healing, family, and birth justice.
"Part One: Hidden Heritage- Abuelita Negrita" was an in-depth conversation and rediscovery of Afro-Latinx roots, centering Black Latinx folks lives and shared experiences. Abuelita Negrita is the colloquialized euphemism for blackness in the broader Latinidad. We've all heard the saying "la abuela negra en el armario”, but when are we going to let her come out? Abuelita Negrita is the keeper of our culture. Abuelita Negrita is where we get our soul. Abuelita Negrita is where we get our sazon. She keeps our stories and our culture yet we act like she is seperate from us.
Part Two: Action Steps to Decolonization: Decolonization involves an understanding of our ancestral practices and accepting who we are outside of a western context. Decolonization is a healing practice, it acknowledges our wounds and cries for justice. In this conversation we integrated relevant voices of our South Florida social justice movement.
“Part Three: Justicia de Parto”
Our last conversation in Enfrentándonos was centered around Birth Justice and the intersections of the "Afro Latinida". We explored and expanded our understanding of white supremacy and how to depart from it. We then went on to hear from care providers and birthing families about their experiences relating to Birth Justice.
An understanding of Birth Justice is important to ensure that birthing people get full spectrum reproductive health support as they make decisions that are best for themselves and families.
Featuring Carmen Antonetty
the Dancing Doula
Stay active while sheltering in place! Self care is excellent care. Community care sustains us.
Weds April 15th 11:30am EST
LIVE ON IG @southernbirthjustice https://www.instagram.com/southernbirthjustice/
Featuring Jamarah Amani
the Birth Justice Midwife
This webinar addresses root causes of disparities in black maternal health outcomes and highlights how the medicalization of childbirth has complicated and marginalized black midwifery in the United States. Challenges and opportunities for Black midwives today are also explored as we look to traditional and holistic care models as solutions for the m
Film and Discussion:
Death by Delivery
Honoring Black Maternal Health Week, Southern Birth Justice Network and Organize Florida hosted a screening of excerpts of the film "Death by Delivery" with guided discussion.
When: Friday, April 17th
Time: 6:00pm - 8:00pm
Stay Tune For A Recording Of This Event!
“It is our duty to fight for our freedom.It is our duty to win.We must love each other and support each other.We have nothing to lose but our chains.”― Assata Shakur
In the spirit of Assata Shakur and the community health model advanced by the Black Pather Party, Southern Birth Justice Network and a host of doctors, first responders and other emergency health workers trained community members in CPR administration, gun shot wound, pregnancy, and emergency response techniques to provide a community based alternative to EMTs and paramedics in marginalized communities. Hosted by Southern Birth Justice Network at the Circle of Brotherhood in Miami, Florida. The purpose of this event was to share information and resources to prepare everyday people to deal with life threatening emergencies.
Street Medics is a concept that originated in the US during the Civil Rights and Anti-War Movement with the idea that we have to care for and protect our own.
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