Holding Our Identities

In any space we inhabit we are never just holding one identity. We are a confluence of the gender, class, race, sexuality, ethnicity, religion and other identities that shape us. Through this exercise we begin to see how our individual identities and the meeting our collective diverse identities affect the way we show up in spaces. Our hope is that through this activity we can become aware of how we embody intersectionality and become compassionate towards the need for inclusion.

Written by

Quime Williams

Edited by

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Developed by

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One day we were invited to facilitate a co-design workshop on a women’s political framework with female parliamentarians from across Sub-Saharan Africa, Asia and North Africa and the Middle East. In addition to helping them surface their ideas and visions, we were asked to come up with an exercise that could help make the concept of intersectionality land in a more felt way.

We took to the challenge with curiosity. In thinking back to an embodied movement exercise we did during our pandemic virtual sessions we saw the possibility to adapt to create a guided walking meditation. In this very simple guided walk, participants would have the possibility to individually yet simultaneously reflect on what intersectionality looks like and means in practice.

Since then, we have integrated this exercise in our participatory action research workshops as part of developing shared skills and language before diving into the research topic. We notice that doing this exercise helps people develop more curiosity for other people’s experience and widens their ability to hold nuance and complexity. This makes a lot of difference later on in the research or learning process when they are invited to unpack the topic of their exploration.