As we commemorate our 25th anniversary, Forward Together's Executive Director, Eveline Shen, reflects on where we were, where we are, and where we are headed.
Twenty five years ago, our founders recognized that while
all women need rights and resources to
insure their reproductive health, too many women of color and low-income have
needs that are not recognized by the established leaders of the reproductive
rights movement.
Our founders – a group of passionate Asian women – knew that
in order for Asian women and other women of color to have the agency and access
we all need to make decisions about our sexuality and reproductive lives, our
voices need to be heard. In particular, they knew that in our communities, it was
young, low-income Asian women who were facing some of the biggest challenges
when it comes to having the agency and access to make decisions about their
reproductive lives and sexuality.
So they did something that seems so common sense, but at the
time was in fact revolutionary: They talked to young Asian women about what
they need in order to thrive. They started where they were, in Oakland. And
they asked them: what challenges are keeping you from living the life that you
want to live? And they listened. And they learned. And they partnered with
young Asian women and together began advocating for themselves and their needs:
Comprehensive sex education. Access to culturally relevant health care. A
healthy environment for their families. Safety from the harassment that keeps
them from reaching their educational goals.
None of these issues were being addressed by the mainstream reproductive
rights movement at the time, but all are essential to helping women and girls
of color to access the power and resources we need to make our own decisions
about our bodies, our families and our lives. Through the leadership of our
young Asian women, we won concrete policy changes that have improved their
lives and their communities.
Our early successes generated more opportunities to lead, so
we began advocating at the state level, and partnering with other groups across
the country to bring the needs of women of color to the center of the
conversation about reproductive health.
Together, we formed a movement of people who sought
reproductive justice, a calling that goes beyond the legal right to choose, and
also recognizes that real, meaningful change that challenges the power
structures that oppress our communities must be led by the people most affected
by the issues we are seeking to change. For us, this meant always centering the
leadership of women and girls of color.
The term “Reproductive Justice” was getting so popular that the
women of color who were doing this work were being sidelined again in its
uptake. Seeing a need to establish women of color and their voices as the core
of the emerging field, we generated a definition and framework of Reproductive
Justice. Published in 2005, A New Vision is still the most widely
used text on the issue.
Our paper defining and recognizing the Reproductive Justice
Movement put us on the map with funders, organizations and decision-makers nationwide.
Our phones were literally ringing off the hooks from people across the country
who saw the power and potential of this framework to be a game changer. The
attention was sometimes overwhelming for our small staff, but we also knew it
was a huge opportunity to harness the excitement and build momentum.
We began to grow. Through the use of Forward Stance – a
mind-body approach that allows us to learn and gain insight through the use of
breath, voice and physical movement – we developed an innovative leadership
model that allowed us to evolve tremendously. We grew from a local organization
working with Asian women and girls into leading a national network that bridges
diverse communities toward a common purpose. The Forward Stance Leadership model allowed
us to stay grounded and focused throughout the evolution, and has been the
secret to our success and longevity.
In recent years, Forward Together has worked with more than
200 organizations across the country to build a strong and vibrant Reproductive
Justice Movement. Through values-based collaborations, we shared resources,
built strategic alliances and began taking collective action. From this work,
the Strong Families initiative was born. Through Strong Families, we are
working together to change culture and policy to reflect the realities of our
families so that all of us can thrive.
Our campaigns emerge from the real concerns of real people who
are standing up for ourselves and our families. We continue to recognize, call
out and eventually overcome the roadblocks that pop up in the intersections
where our race, class, gender and sexuality are used to keep us from the future
we want for all of us.
And through it all, we continue to train Asian youth in
Oakland to advocate for themselves, their families and their futures.
We listen. We learn. We lead. And we move forward, together.
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Blog posts represent the opinion of the author, not necessarily Forward Together or Strong Families.