Stop Hate: Action Steps for Local Communities | Not in Our Town

Stop Hate: Action Steps for Local Communities

What can we do in our local communities to stop hate and make everyone feel safe? Action steps for community leaders and schools.

The core message of Not In Our Town is that each of us has a role to play in stopping hate and creating safe, inclusive communities and schools for everyone.  Read through the brief action steps listed below, find the actions you can take and share them with others in your city or school.

 

Community Members and Concerned Residents


Community members in Billings, MT come together to paint over hate speech graffiti

  • Find your voice. When you speak up, others will, too.  Ask for ideas about how to counter hate at civic, neighborhood  and community meetings.

  • Show support for community members who have been targeted. Show up at vigils, send letters and messages showing you care.

  • Identify community allies, neighbors, and organizational partners who can join you.

  • Bring your neighbors together. Reach out to people you don’t know and those who have been targeted

  • Ask your local leaders, law enforcement, educators and youth to participate.

Ideas: Host a screening of a NIOT film. Here is a link to films. NIOT films help people open the conversation about how people can work together to stop hate.  After the screening, ask people to talk about who is vulnerable to hate and intolerance in your community and agree to make an action plan together to address it. Convene a community potluck to share backgrounds and history.

Elected Officials and Civic Leaders

Photo by David Proeber, The Pantagraph

 

  • Make a public statement, released to media, that places diversity, acceptance and inclusion as a core value in your town.

  • Urge people who have been targeted to come forward and encourage all residents to stand with their neighbors.

  • Meet with local media: Invite community members and leaders who may be vulnerable to hate to join you in a meeting with media outlets to expose current tensions and suggest solutions that emerge from convenings.

  • Hold town hall meetings and community dialogues that allow all voices to be heard.

When leaders are brave, others will follow. Ignoring the problem of hate and intolerance may lead to escalating violence and mistrust.  Work with diverse community members to convene a town hall meeting to launch long range plans to build a safe, inclusive community for all residents.

Students

Standing opposite of the library at Grimmer Elementary School, the Kindness Tree mural serves as a reminder to all those who see it to cultivate kindness.

Standing opposite of the library at Grimmer Elementary School, the Kindness Tree mural serves as a reminder to all those who see it to cultivate kindness.

 

  • Speak up when you witness bias, hate and bullying.

  • Go to a trusted teacher or campus leader  for guidance and support

  • Reach out and stand with  each other and all who are  targets of hate and bias

  • Work with campus or school leaders to show support for student actions to prevent hate

Young people can galvanize the entire community to stand up to hate.  Teach-Ins and student actions can educate and inspire not only fellow students, but they can motivate adults and community leaders to act.  

 

Find out more here.

Educators

Educators

Photo Credit: The Great Kindness Challenge

  • Acknowledge hate speech, hate crimes or bias incidents when they occur and make it clear to the community that this type of behavior is unacceptable. Engage community.

  • Create a forum for dialogue about differences and diversity.

  • Involve students in finding solutions and leading their peers to stop hate and bullying.

  • Inform parents of the issues and the actions you are taking to find solutions.

Find out more here.

Law Enforcement

The Los Angeles County Sheriff’s Department 

  • Make sure the responding officers are trained to investigate and report the hate crime or incident.  When an incident occurs, connect with community and faith-based groups to demonstrate how community members and law enforcement can work together to provide security and make sure everyone knows that hate incidents will be taken seriously.
  • Be transparent and open about the investigation into hate incidents- if the preliminary investigation reveals that a hate incident occurred, report this back to the community.  
  • Be vocal in the condemnation of hate in your community.  Law enforcement leaders can and will set the tone that hate, intolerance and bigotry have no place in the community.

Find out more here.

Faith Leaders

After a member of their community was attacked last year, The Sikh Coalition organized a large interfaith rally 

 

  • Discuss the role of compassion and kindness in overcoming hate and intolerance with your congregation.

  • Ask religious school students to reflect on the teachings of your faith are an antidote to hate.

  • Convene a discussion on Pastor Martin Niemoller’s famous quote about the need to stand up to hate no matter who is targeted.

  • Reach out to other congregations in your community, especially those who have been targeted.

  • Create opportunities for interfaith gatherings and collaboration on community service projects.

Find out more here.

 

If we, FACE FEAR and FIND COURAGE, we can STOP HATE, TOGETHER.

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