Earlier this month, we hosted Humanity Through Community鈥攁n event engaging the challenges of community in a changing context. Creative, attorney, and organizer Nikkita Oliver and scholar Robin DiAngelo joined us to grapple with the themes of healing and resistance, followed by panel discussionss inviting socially engaged people of faith to critically engage the challenges of our culture.

The discussion that followed Nikkita Oliver鈥檚 stunning talk (which you can watch here) was facilitated by Dr. Angela Parker, Assistant Professor of Biblical Studies. The panel included Rev. Kelle Brown, pastor of Plymouth Church in downtown Seattle and a faith leader in the Center for Religious Wisdom and World Affairs; Andy Carlson (Master of Divinity, 鈥11), pastor of Awake in north Seattle and part of the community that founded the ; and Dr. Sharon A. Suh, Professor of Theology and Religious Studies at Seattle University and author of .

Together, the panelists reflect on the themes of resilience and justice Nikkita evoked, wrestling together with the questions that were sparked among them. They return to the image of a flower pushing through a crack in the concrete, challenging us to not just praise the resilience of the flower but to question the existence of the concrete. 鈥淚t is time for us to understand that there are many, many roses under the concrete,鈥 says Rev. Brown.

鈥淭here are many, many roses under the concrete.鈥

The panelists urge us to critically examine how we engage conversations of justice and trauma, confronting the ways in which common conceptions of resilience, fragility, and complicity often prop up white supremacy and other systems of oppression. These voices call us to move beyond the tendency to remain silent or to deploy buzzwords in a way that keeps us safe, and to move toward the fearlessness of honesty and action.

鈥淲e live in a very pain-avoidant society,鈥 says Nikkita Oliver as she reflects on the words of the panelists. She reminds us that if we choose another path, if we choose to tell whole stories and speak truth to power, we cannot do so alone. We need community with others who know us and affirm us and can continue calling us back to truth, offering 鈥渁 reflection of the communal struggle that we鈥檙e sharing as individuals.鈥

Watch Nikkita Oliver’s talk that sparked this conversation.