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BIPOC SING PEOPLE SING! EVENTS ARE MONTHLY IN 2025

DATES / TIX:

MARCH 18

APRIL 15

MAY 13

JULY 15

AUGUST 19

SEPTEMBER 30

OCTOBER 14

NOVEMBER 11

DECEMBER 9


STANDARD EVENT INFO…

THE VENUE:

This event is taking place in the Center for Joy at Sabin CDC, an affordable housing community that works toward social equity by stabilizing & improving the livability of culturally-diverse Portland neighborhoods, with a special focus on African American households, by encouraging community partnerships for local economic development, and by offering youth & senior programs.

We are so grateful for the generosity of Sabin CDC in offering us this space for our event. 

Please use street parking to respect the use of parking specifically designated for residents in the area.

The door entrance to the Community Space is accessible from the sidewalk on Alberta St. and is ADA accessible. 

EVENT DETAILS:

6:30-7pm arrival, we will sing from 7-9pm

All ages welcome

$10-40 sliding scale

Pay what you can. No one turned away for lack of funds.

Your contribution helps to keep this event sustainable and regenerative. If financial resources are limited, we offer a pay what you can ticket option. And of course, no one is turned away. If you’d like to offer reciprocity in other ways, please reach out to the facilitators. (i.e help with set/clean up, or other skills/offerings)

DESCRIPTION:

We invite you to this singing gathering FOR BIPOC COMMUNITY to experience the power of song as medicine, as a tool for liberation, and to simply fill your well of joy and connection. We believe singing is a birthright and welcome all levels of experience. We teach songs on-the-spot, usually through call and echo, that are sourced from the modern community singing movement or have come through the song leaders themselves.

This offering is evolving in response to the emergent needs and alive energy of the community showing up to it. We often include moments of authentic sharing and community connection to inform, weave into, and deepen the experience of song.

We may sing some songs in Spanish or other languages.

We may invite a space for song-sharing from the community.

We hope you will bring the wholeness of who you are to this embodied experience of singing with full permission to be in movement, grief, laughter and more.

We understand that this country has a legacy of taking cultural / musical gifts from BIPOC folks and using them inappropriately, out of context, or for profit. We will do our best to sing songs with permission, to acknowledge context wherever possible, or simply NOT sing certain songs if it feels at all harmful. We also understand that many of us have connections to community singing through religious contexts. This may still be meaningful or may be alienating. To create more inclusivity, we will avoid explicitly religious content. We do invite a spiritual space but do our best to sing from common ground.

WHO THIS SPACE IS FOR:

This singing event for BIPOC-ONLY. Mixed race folks are welcome. At this time, white-presenting folks are also welcome who understand the privilege that comes with being so.

As part of registration, you will be required to answer a few questions. If you drop-in to the offering, we may ask you these questions in-person. If you have ALREADY answered these questions in the past, you DO NOT have to answer them again. Just put "already answered" or just simply put "--" in the response field.

If you are still unsure whether this space is for you, know that we welcome anyone who experiences dehumanization, discrimination, restricted access, the harm of implicit bias and micro-aggressions for their non-whiteness whether that be expressed in their familial upbringing, way of speaking, name, or physical features. We are doing our best to hold a sanctuary where those accustomed to code-switching and trauma-response strategies can rest, grieve, and feel safe expressing their joy.

If you are struggling with the pain of not knowing where you belong, I assure you, you belong to community singing. Please understand that this specific offering is to allow BIPOC community a chance for deeper resourcing where, in most other spaces, extra energy is spent tending to the stresses and disadvantages, the wear and tear on the soul, of navigating pre-dominantly white spaces and living inside of white supremacist culture, mentality, and institutions as a non-white person.

If this offering is not a fit, please consider attending one of Sing People Sing!'s all-inclusive events, currently happening every other month.

REGARDING COVID-19:

If you are not feeling well, please stay home. You can request a refund for any Covid-related situations. Masking is not required for this event. We encourage you to mask and distance to your own comfort level and will hold a culture of respect for the choices everyone makes to take care of themselves.

ACKNOWLEDGEMENT & TITHING:

We acknowledge that the land upon which we will sing is the traditional territory of the Multnomah, Wasco, Cowlitz, Kathlamet, Clackamas, Bands of Chinook, Tualatin, Kalapuya, Molalla, Grande Ronde and many more tribes.

A portion of donations will go to the Native American Youth and Family Center (nayapdx.org) to support our enduring indigenous community.

WHAT WILL BE PROVIDED:

Water and hot tea (This is a no-alcohol event)

Chairs

Restroom facilities

An outdoor area to get fresh air

WHAT TO BRING:

A water bottle or travel mug, if you can

A notebook, if you like to jot down inspiration or song information

Your voice

Your open heart

Your whole truth

YOUR HOSTS & ORGANIZERS:

Shireen Amini (non-binary using she/her) is a queer Puerto Rican-Iranian American, earth-loving song creator, rhythm maker, and community facilitator based on unceded Multnomah, Wasco, Cowlitz, Kathlamet, Clackamas, Chinook, Tualatin, Kalapuya, Molalla, and Grande Ronde territory, aka Portland, Oregon. As a human, she carries a deep commitment to her own liberation path and vision of a more just world. She blends pop, rock, hip hop, latin, and roots sensibilities with socially-conscious themes as a singer-songwriter and creates modern medicine music for community singing. As a community songleader, she holds transformational space, leading joyful, groove-based songs, evoking tenderness, and often engaging her participants in rhythm and ceremony. She also teaches drumming, hosts a Portland-based queer and poc-led song circle series called Sing People Sing!, and facilitates grief ritual as part of her community-based music empowerment project, Shireen Amini Music Medicine.

Darlissa Andrea (she/her) is a Puerto Rican, Cape Verdean, and Hawaiian singer-songwriter, community facilitator, life coach and lover of the people. She focuses on bringing folks together through self development, connection, community collaboration.