Saturday School 2023

Saturday School 2023 is a practice space for creative organising.

Together we will explore three strategic practices that support us to embody, imagine and design for Border Abolition.

Embodied Leadership

Science-fiction writing

Design Justice

‘All organizing is science fiction.

When organizers imagine a world without poverty, without war, without borders or prisons—that's science fiction.

They're moving beyond the boundaries of what is possible or realistic, into the realm of what we are told is impossible.

Being able to collectively dream those new worlds means that we can begin to create those new worlds here.’

- Walidah Imarisha

Images by Sana Badri

Who is it for?

Saturday School is a learning and practice space for 45 organisers, specifically allocating 15 open call places for organisers, culture workers, artists and designers with lived experiences of migration, diaspora and displacement.

You do not need to have any familiarity with art, writing and body-based work.

Applications for Saturday School 2023 are now closed. Please sign up to our newsletter if you’d like to find out about future Saturday Schools.

What will we do?

We will meet 4 times (in person and online) from July to Sept 2023 to participate in creative workshops led by experienced movement facilitators.

The workshops will nurture creative insight and skills that can strengthen resilient and imaginative organising towards Border Abolition, and provide practical tools to embed in daily life.

3 questions will anchor the programme:

Are we practicing what we want to become?

How are we imagining ourselves into the future?

What are we designing to replace borders? 

What is Embodied Leadership, Science-fiction and Design Justice?

Embodied Leadership:

The body is the place we can transform trauma and align our visions most directly.’ (Staci Haines, Generative Somatics)

Embodied leadership, allyship and somatic techniques support us to bring our full selves to our visions so that we can be more resourced and connected in our leadership. Through trauma-informed somatic practices, we grow our capacity to navigate burnout, to resource healing, and to build healthy movements. 

Science-fiction writing:

It is our right and responsibility to write ourselves into the future’ - (Walidah Imarisha and adrienne maree brown, Octavia’s Brood).

If imagination is one of the spoils of colonisation, nurturing the capacity of oppressed communities to imagine is a necessary and powerful resource for our movements. Through the practice of creative and science-fiction writing, we exercise our ability to vision alternatives to the status quo, and to embolden our strategies. 

Design Justice:

‘We use design to sustain, heal and empower our communities, as well as to seek liberation from exploitative and oppressive systems’ (Design Justice Network Principle 1)

Design Justice is an approach to design that is led by marginalised communities to challenge rather than reproduce structural inequalities. Through Design Justice principles, we nurture an intention to design strategies and stories that are movement-led, and center choice and possibility.

Resources

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Resources 〰️

Any questions?

Get in touch with Becca from Migrants in Culture: hello@migrantsinculture.com

Who is delivering Saturday School?

Saturday School is convened by Migrants In Culture in partnership with Migrants Organise, Healing Justice Ldn, Solidarity Knows No Borders (SKNB) and The Joseph Rowntree Charitable Trust (JRCT)

Workshop facilitators include: Farzana Khan, Dima Mekdad, Hanna Thomas Uose, Rosalie Schweiker, Cecilia Wee 


Speakers include: Gracie Mae Bradley, Chelsea McDonagh, Laith Elzubaidi, Lorraine Mponela, Jess Poyner and more tbc.