Spend half an hour chatting about feminism with the young womxn of color who run the CENTER Youth Collective, and a lot will come up.
The CENTERโit stands for โCreate. Engage. Notice. Teach. Empower. Remember.โโis a social justice-oriented youth outreach center in North Portland. Its Youth Collective is made up largely of teenage womxn of color, all of them juniors and seniors at different Portland high schools.
Theyโre coming of age at an extraordinary time for womxn in US culture, as #MeToo and the Womenโs March continue to dominate headlines, and as womxn see more representation in politics, media, corporations, and other leadership roles.
I visited the CENTER to learn about their experiences living in Portland, their struggles with white feminism, and their hopes for the future. Hereโs what the next generation of leaders has to say.
On living in Portland
โAlthough Portland is labeled as this super progressive and super liberal city, the under-the-floorboards situation is not that,โ says Jazkia Phillips, a senior at Catlin Gable School. โThat has some impact on how women, and specifically women of color, are viewed in Portland and especially in the media. We donโt get a lot of coverage or a lot of airtime.โ
โSince the 2016 election, it has motivated people to be more outward with their racist beliefs,โ says Bella Myers, also a senior at Catlin Gable. โItโs kind of scary in a sense, because they had those racist thoughts before, but it wasnโt publicly okay to be so outward.โ
โItโs scary being a woman in certain neighborhoods sometimes,โ says Rama Thioub, a Grant High School junior whose mother gave her Mace to carry during her walk home from work at night. โAnd itโs like, as a person of color, am I even going to come home?โ
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On intersectionality and white feminism
โWith these movements, like #MeToo and the Womenโs Marchโa lot of times women of color and Black women, their voices are de-centered and theyโre pushed out of the format of those movements, when a lot of times theyโre the ones that are creating them,โ says Phillips. โThereโs a lot of white feminism, where white women are taking ownership of those things.โ
โWe have a club at school called SAFER [Students Active For Ending Rape], and they do incredible work,โ says Gabby Cosey, a senior at Lincoln High School. โBut itโs also really obvious when they have, like, a hundred people turn out for their club, and then our Black Student Union, which is open for everybody, has 15 on a good day. Itโs much trendier to go to the Womenโs March, and trendier to go to a Kavanaugh protest, than it is to go to a Black Lives Matter protest.โ
โI want to support all women of all cultures,โ says Karina Alcantara, a senior at Benson Polytechnic High School. โFeminists are portrayed as just white women. Itโs hard for me to identify as a feminist.โ
On role models
โIโm looking forward to moments where I can mentor young women of color, because I definitely wish I had a more local role model,โ says Myers, who looks to Michelle Obama for inspiration. โI wish I had more people when I was, like, eight when I was in elementary school, because that definitely would have set me up differently.โ
Phillips names Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez as her role model, because โitโs really important to see a woman of color not shy away from her identity, or the things that she cares about, or the things that are important to her.โ
On the future
โI definitely have hope, especially because people my age are finally going to be able to vote in the 2020 election,โ says Amira Tripp Folsom, a junior at La Salle Catholic College Preparatory. โI think people are waking up and realizing, โOh [crap], we could do something.โโ
โI wouldnโt be involved in this work as much as I am if I didnโt believe that things could change,โ says Cosey. โMy advice for anybody is to think critically about the world around us. Itโs okay to acknowledge the wrong to be able to get to the right.โ

I imagine what she means is more akin to, will she come home, or: will some Proud Boy try to fuck with her and jump her while nobody is looking? Or maybe his good buddy on the Portland Police force will arrest her and she will say a swear word and get too uppity and 12 hrs later she will be found dead in her cell like Sandra Bland? Or will some incel white supremacist homicidal maniac on the light rail try to stab her to death for being too brown? No woman wants to end up a statistic, no person of color wants to either. It could come from anybody, too. It could come from Officer Friendly, or a hate-group member, or both in the same body.
All statistically insignificant events for a reasonable person to be concerned with on a daily basis. BTW, thanks for removing my original comment, Mercury. Complete censorship BS on a comment that wasn’t worthy of removal.