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Planting
the Seeds of Justice
With rare exception, the fight against injustice is a slow, incremental
process--sometimes glacially slow. And injustice often pushes back.
"We certainly are in a situation now where we are on the losing
side," says Peter Kuhns 98, a field organizer for ACORN
(Association of Community Organizers for Reform Now). For him, the fight
is about empowering low-income communities to seek their own justice.
The fight can be daunting, Kuhns acknowledges, but in the same breath
he describes his job as "very satisfying".
"Certainly progress is being made, but we are not anywhere near
where we would like to be, which is to have a major portion of our country
organized," Kuhns says. "It is an ongoing process."
Process is a word Kuhns almost clings to.
"You have to look at what the larger picture is," he says, giving
advice to anyone who may want to join a similar effort. "Its
about the process, not about one victory we may or may not get."
He has been with ACORN for almost 4 years now, working sometimes 50 to
60 hours a week, often including Saturdays. As a field organizer, Kuhnss
job is to go into low-income neighborhoods and help create a movement
from within.
As the name ACORN implies, the organization plants a seed in a community,
then depends on those living there to make something grow. It is an effort
Kuhns says he is committed to.
"Self-sufficiency is our goal," says Kuhns. "The larger
goals is building power for low-income people, so they have a voice in
the decisions that are made about their lives."
Kuhns works in Los Angeles, one of the newer chapters. ACORN has been
in LA for about 6 years, he says.
"It is daunting. It is overwhelming and inspiring at the same time,"
Kuhns explains. "Part of helping to combat a feeling of desperation
is being part of a national organization
We have won some major changes."
ACORN is a grassroots organization started 32 years ago in Little Rock,
Arkansas. Then, a group of welfare mothers began pushing for access to
better jobs with fairer wages. Today it purports to be have a membership
of 125,000, with 500 neighborhood chapters in 40 cities across the country.
Its aim is to organize low-income communities so they can fight for changes
that will benefit them.
The theory behind ACORN was not new to Kuhns when he joined. He had learned
about these same principles, which he calls "social change theory",
while at Pomona College. In his words, "the key principles are having
the people effected by the problem leading the fight for change, and feeling
ownership. Building a democratic organization that is going to continue
to push for those changes."
Kuhns says he first developed a sense that he wanted to "help fight
injustice and level the playing field" for disadvantaged communities
when he was growing up in Iowa City, Iowa. He was raised in a middle-class
neighborhood, but began working with low-income individuals at a nonprofit
center in town--in Iowa City, low-income meant "mostly people of
color," Kuhns says.
The work was rewarding, he adds, but he wanted to affect change at a deeper
level.
As he prepared to choose a college, he looked westward to Los Angeles.
He had a desire to live in a more diverse community than the one in which
he grew up.
"I always wanted to work in a diverse community. Im happier
that way. Iowa City is pretty homogenous
mostly white, mostly middle-class."
He enrolled at Pomona College, a smaller school than he had originally
hoped to attend. It was only later, he says, he realized the schools
size was an advantage since it afforded him a chance to develop more meaningful
relationships with his professors and fellow students who would have a
profound effect on his life.
Sitting in the middle of Claremont, the immediate neighborhood surrounding
Pomona College is not much different than the Kuhnss Iowa City.
Seeking to get out into a more diverse community, he volunteered to work
with Pomona Partners, a program brings college students into schools in
the city of Pomona.
That city, which gave the college its namesake when it was first established
there, has a far larger minority community and many more disadvantaged
neighborhoods than does Claremont.
On campus, Kuhns joined like-minded students in a campaign to create a
diversity requirement as part of the colleges core curriculum, and
he protested against state Proposition 209, which ended many affirmative
action programs in Californias public colleges and universities.
"I had teachers that encouraged me to be active," Kuhns says,
including some with backgrounds in union organizing. "Real change,
fundamentally, comes from organizing, pushing from the outside, and agitating."
He learned about ACORN through a campus-recruiting program. Kuhns did
not join the group right out of college, however, first taking a part-time
job at a substance abuse treatment center for kids in Pomona.
He found himself attracted to ACORN, finding it the closest thing to putting
the theory he learned in college into practice. "This really was
a pure building of a movement for social and economic justice, which is
really what I wanted to do."
The first campaign he worked on with ACORN was in Watts, a city long synonymous
with "poor, disadvantaged and minority." The effort was to get
alleyways in certain areas cleaned up and closed off to through traffic.
"The strategy to winning was direct action: inviting city administrators
out on a tour, bringing the media out, asking, When are you going
to fix this? and shoving a microphone in their face," says
Kuhns.
In spite of the tactics, and the seemingly harmless request, the campaign
was not a complete success.
"You dont always win," Kuhns says. "The most important
thing is the process, showing people they have power and have a voice.
Having people feel like they have a seat at the table in making decision
that affect their lives.
"I think there a lot of people doing great work in this field. I
wish there were more."
Indeed, it takes many hands on the glacier to start it back in the right
direction.
-Gary Scott
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