*Please note this workshop series is only open for registration for BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and Person of Colour) identified individuals. Her memoir essay, "A Slow Death in Academia" was published in Radical: An Unapologetic Anthology by Women & Gender Nonconforming Storytellers of Color. Her visual art, "University Ableism Bingo" was featured in Pandemic: A Feminist Response, and the zine, CRIP COLLAB. Her essay, "Inclusive Reproductive Justice," was published in Volume 2 of the Reproductive Justice Briefing Book: A Primer on Reproductive Justice and Social Change. Her articles have been featured in Huffington Post, Healthline, Prism, and Canadaland, among other publications. She has taught "Justice and the Poor: Issues of Race, Class, and Gender" at Nipissing University, and looks forward to teaching the Writing for Social Change youth writing course at the Loft Literary Center. Her passion for lifelong development and community service is demonstrated by her past time on the board of directors at the Capitol Centre, and ongoing work serving on a Project Advisory Committee on Women's Sexual Health for the Association for South Asian AIDS Prevention. Krystal Kavita Jagoo is a social worker, artist, and educator who prioritizes equity in all of her efforts. Interested in learning more about Sustainable Resistance and signing up for our online workshops? Visit this link to participate in our workshops happening every Sunday from October 3rd to December 5th. Through immersive readings from brilliant BIPOC authors, accompanied by therapeutic writing and reflection with the goal of attendees to leave each of these sessions with a sense of futuristic possibility for how they can improve and maintain mental health with resistance. These nine therapeutic writing workshops for BIPOC participants are grounded in anti-oppressive practice. Sustainable Resistance for BIPOC Folx, a Community+Connects Online Program facilitated by artist and social worker Krystal Kavita Jagoo invites BIPOC participants of all genders, ages, and abilities to immerse themselves in therapeutic writing and reflection this fall at Scarborough Arts. Met with resistance against collective societal gaslighting from rigged systems rooted in whiteness, how can BIPOC individuals rise up and foster their own stories of the future and survival?
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