Priya Vulchi and Winona Guo: What it takes to be racially literate
Priya Vulchi is traveling to all US states with her friend Winona Guo, learning and listening to stories about race. Full bioWinona Guo - Social entrepreneur, student activist
Winona Guo is spending her gap year traveling to all US states with her friend Priya Vulchi, learning and listening to stories about race and trying to find innovative ways to tackle inequity. Full bio
Double-click the English transcript below to play the video.
we really thought we understood racism.
we had experienced and heard stories
discrimination and stereotyping
racism, we got it, we got it."
that we had to listen and learn more.
random people as we could
of personal stories about race,
is a nationwide epidemic
to recognize or get rid of.
our standards of racial literacy,
to be racially literate.
across the United States
to grow up equipped
navigate and improve
the community as a place
of our own backgrounds,
experiences as if they were our own.
from high school this past June.
would have helped us understand --
all our classmates is that they don't.
so many of which are racially divided,
for an education about race,
have conversations about race,
each of our experiences,
be compassionate beyond lip service.
systemic ways in which racism operates.
a few times in school, growing up.
about Martin Luther King Jr.
once upon a time,
a story from the present day,
told us in Pittsburgh that --
Facebook and typed in our last name.
great-great-grandfather owned slaves
great-grandmother was one of them.
under a white man's name.
who would I even be?"
lasting legacy today is made clear, right?
would throw out these cold statistics.
in news headlines.
the rate of white people.
wrongly incarcerated for 12 years.
that same fatherly figure for her:
it might even be annoying at some points.
just the facts alone,
understanding of those facts.
who don't understand racism
of white supremacy and oppression,
that that pain exists at all.
that are being affected,
like unjust laws and biased policing
incarceration rates over time.
of native Hawaiians like Kimmy
by the island's long history
through generations to today.
unique experiences in the classroom.
reclaiming my place in this city.
isn't the nice architecture downtown,
the pink line, the working immigrant class
acknowledged his personal experience,
about how redlining
neighborhoods we live in today.
of everything around us,
on people's isolated experiences.
Sandra in DC once told us:
I know how to move with them.
feel like I care about them.
ways of showing love.
who's not Korean, however,
and he's just not.
want to be expected
how it's emblematic of something larger,
widespread hunger and poverty
as Sandra's parents' generation
having that nuanced understanding
context behind it,
to unnecessary fighting.
that we proactively --
the different values and norms
so that we can heal together --
a racial literacy textbook
between our hearts and minds.
of statisticians and scholars.
blown away by people's experiences,
of our collective racial reality.
the people around you,
that Louise from Seattle
internment camps.
33,000 Japanese Americans
interning their families.
both in camps and in service,
their history forgotten.
that interracial marriages
has been programmed for them to fail.
someone shouted,
on cis straight relationships
and to fetishize Asian women.
in the year 2000,
and a white wife.
once society says otherwise.
that white people like Lisa in Chicago
on the term whiteness and its history,
can't be equated with American.
her own personal family's history
with horns and tails.
and interpersonal privileges,
leverage that white privilege
with other people of privilege about race.
in her classroom to her students
of racism and poverty.
that native languages are dying.
in the Cherokee language,
than 12,000 people speak today,
of preservation of culture and history.
the nongendered Cherokee language
as a trans woman
a saying in Cherokee,
323 million people in the United States.
for racial literacy.
in an education that values --
PV: And statistics --
PV: And the numbers --
PV: And the systemic --
understand each other.
WG: Love one another.
to create a new national community.
of mutual suffering and celebration.
in our own local communities,
our own hearts and minds
we will be that much closer
that fight and care equally for all of us.
will be able to remain distant.
mom and dad, college can wait.
traveling to all 50 states
left to interview in.
ABOUT THE SPEAKERS
Priya Vulchi - Social entrepreneur, student activistPriya Vulchi is traveling to all US states with her friend Winona Guo, learning and listening to stories about race.
Why you should listen
For a collective future of racial justice, we must educate and empower our young generation now. Yet, the first time 18-year-olds Priya Vulchi and Winona Guo were required to talk about race in school was the 10th grade.
That same year, Vulchi co-founded CHOOSE with Guo to equip us all with the tools we lack to both talk about race and act toward systemic change. Their latest publication, a racial literacy textbook and toolkit for educators called The Classroom Index, has been recognized by Princeton University's Prize in Race Relations & Not in Our Town's Unity Award, featured in Teen Vogue, the Philadelphia Inquirer, & the Huffington Post, and called a “social innovation more necessary than the iPhone” by Professor Ruha Benjamin. Currently on a gap year before attending Princeton University, Vulchi and Guo have been traveling to all US states collecting hundreds of powerful stories about race, culture, and intersectionality for another book to be released in spring 2019. Follow their journey on princetonchoose.org or @princetonchoose on Instagram and Facebook.
Priya Vulchi | Speaker | TED.com
Winona Guo - Social entrepreneur, student activist
Winona Guo is spending her gap year traveling to all US states with her friend Priya Vulchi, learning and listening to stories about race and trying to find innovative ways to tackle inequity.
Why you should listen
For a collective future of racial justice, we must educate and empower our young generation now. Yet, the first time 18-year-olds Winona Guo and Priya Vulchi were required to talk about race in school was the 10th grade.
That same year, Guo co-founded CHOOSE with Vulchi to equip us all with the tools we lack to both talk about race and act toward systemic change. Their latest publication, a racial literacy textbook and toolkit for educators called The Classroom Index, has been recognized by Princeton University's Prize in Race Relations & Not in Our Town's Unity Award, featured in Teen Vogue, the Philadelphia Inquirer, & the Huffington Post, and called a “social innovation more necessary than the iPhone” by Professor Ruha Benjamin. Currently on a gap year before attending Harvard University, Guo and Vulchi have been traveling to all US states collecting hundreds of powerful stories about race, culture, and intersectionality for another book to be released in spring 2019. Follow their journey on princetonchoose.org or @princetonchoose on Instagram and Facebook.
Winona Guo | Speaker | TED.com