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We can’t end hunger without ending systemic racism

by Susannah Morgan, CEO

“The ultimate tragedy is not the oppression and cruelty by the bad people but the silence over that by the good people.”

– Reverend Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.

In his open letter to the community, Marcus Mundy shared the above quote from Martin Luther King Jr. — one that speaks to the incredible importance of our collective voice in this moment.

Marcus is the Executive Director of the Coalition of Communities of Color. I feel it is important right now for Oregon Food Bank to amplify the wisdom of Portland’s Black leaders — and I am grateful that Marcus agreed for us to share his message with our community. Listening to Black leadership is one of the tangible steps we must all take to begin turning the page on our nation’s long history of systemic racism and oppression.

As a white woman, I will never personally experience many of the injustices Marcus outlines in his letter. Yet, I see the undeniable evidence and effects of these injustices every day in our work at Oregon Food Bank. Because the symptoms of systemic racism and oppression know many names: Police brutality. Mass incarceration. Poverty. Hunger. The list goes on and on.

That’s why it is so critical that we all commit ourselves and our organizations to be actively anti-racist — because our liberation is tied to the liberation of everyone in our communities. Our experience tells us that we cannot solve hunger without ending structural oppression; we cannot end poverty without eliminating systemic racism.

This is a time to echo, support and lift up leaders and organizations that are working to end structural racism in our communities — and join them in the movement. At Oregon Food Bank, we are proud to stand with the millions of community members who have taken to the streets to demand justice and liberation. We pledge to support partners and allies who are leading the movement during this time of profound grief. And we will continue to invest in the long-term, systemic changes that will end hunger and its root causes.


TO: An Open Letter to Community — Portland, Oregon, United States of America

FROM: Marcus C. Mundy, Executive Director, Coalition of Communities of Color

RE: We Can’t Breathe


Eric Garner could not breathe. George Floyd could not breathe. I cannot breathe.

I, my brothers, my son, my cousins, my friends – Black men all – watched in abject, stultifying horror this week as yet another Black man died at the hands of yet another policeman in yet another video broadcast to the world as if it were some rerun detached from reality. It was not detached from reality. It is reality. Our daily, inescapable reality as Black men in America.

We know all the victims’ names by now. We know the outcomes. We all know, step by inexorable step, the Kabuki theater that ensues after each such incident, the choreographed recitation of the injustice. The video is shared; the indignation is palpable; the protests begin; the lawyers go on television;usually, the perpetrators are not punished; the laws don’t change; police training doesn’t change; the cycle begins again…

Many tears were shed as we collectively and individually watched replays, on the daily news no less, of the very life oozing out of a man who looked just like us, right in front of our eyes. Such frequency of these events, I believe, attempts to numb us to its harshness, but: it cannot, not for Black men or those who love us. Our mere existence in the world as Black men should not evoke such rage from others, and such callous indifference for human life should evoke outrage, not just from Black people, but from all people.

I would trade a million virtue-signaling lawn signs stating “Black Lives Matter” and “In Our America, Love Wins” for a single day of those epigrams being realized. Arbery, Bland, and Cooper must not be the ABCs of Black life in America. They should be our societal wake-up call.

As the Mayor of Minneapolis reminded us, “If you had done it or I had done it we would be behind bars right now.” But it wasn’t the mayor, or me, or you; it was a craven Minneapolis “peace officer” who committed this incomprehensible act as his three equally culpable and enabling colleagues looked on. No charges filed, investigation underway. So here we go again.

Fannie Lou Hamer once plaintively said, over 50 years ago, “…I am sick and tired of being sick and tired.” She was speaking about civil rights then, but that phrase should apply to all of us right now, especially when it comes to the incessant, inhuman ways that Black men are treated in America. This person violated not just the civil rights Ms. Hamer was speaking of, but the most essential human right: the right to live.

After witnessing the replay of the slow motion demise of George Floyd, many of us feel horror; but that horror no longer means anything without action. Our bromides and platitudes and good intentions and righteous indignation, however heartfelt, are as a flatus in the wind unless we are prepared to work for change, and respectfully demand that change.

I reflected today that the mission of the Coalition of Communities of Color (CCC) is to “address the socioeconomic disparities, institutional racism and inequity of services experienced by our families, children and communities; and to organize our communities for collective action resulting in social change to obtain self-determination, wellness, justice and prosperity.” If little else is clear, institutional racism and inequity of services are real, and evidenced in the treatment of George Floyd. We must see what is happening in the world and, with our mission in mind, commit ourselves to action.

We must, and immediately:

  • work to remove any policies on our existing jurisdictions’ books similar to those in Minneapolis, which may permit the use of the procedure used to kill George Floyd;
  • work to facilitate and codify the implementation of suggestions developed by groups such as the Portland Police Reform Network, the Albina Ministerial Alliance Coalition for Justice and Police Reform, etc., in a formalized process;
  • work to strengthen the Independent Police Review Division and the Citizen Review Committee, with the goal of adding power to compel testimony;
    seek to facilitate and codify change in Oregon State Statutes, as appropriate, for use of deadly force by officers;
  • work to have jurisdictions commit to training/retraining all law enforcement officers on proper use of force decision making matrices;
  • work to have jurisdictions commit to explicit, comprehensive Diversity, Equity, Inclusion training for all law enforcement officers, as well as heightened de-escalation training;
  • work to seek and acquire a commitment from all police unions, governmental leaders and officers in Oregon to condemn illegal or immoral behavior from police officers

The CCC urges all of you to take the steps we have outlined, with us. There is more than one pandemic raging in America, and none will be solved without collective action.

Join us. Help us end the reruns of “Another Black Man Killed Today Show”.

Join us. Help us breathe again.


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