Unlearning Racism for Resistance:

an online workshop designed for white LGBTQI+ community members (and allies)

Fighting fascism by unlearning our own racism. A 3-Part Workshop designed for white LGBTQI+ community members (and allies). Facilitated by Rachel Siegel from Toward Liberation LLC. Details pending.

Location: Online only.

Dates and other details: TBD

Click here to be added to the waiting list.

During this time of escalating racism and xenophobia, we need everyone to show up in all the ways we can. Come together to unlearn, dismantle, and heal from systems of domination. Help build communities that support people in their full humanity.

By growing our capacity for equitable relationships, we are better able to navigate what we want, be it personal change, family dynamics, or FASCIST RESISTANCE.

One goal of the workshop is for those of us who are white lesbians/queers to develop as anti-racist allies and accomplices so our lesbian/queer communities as well as our wider communities will be more inclusive.

Topics include:

Culture and Identity: Reclaiming, Rewriting, Repurposing Social Access

From Savior to Ally to Accomplice: Identifying, disrupting, and unlearning internalized superiority and internalized inferiority in order to build power

Building Anti-racist Resistance to the Fascist State: What is my role?

Zoom expectations: Workshop sessions will be held on zoom and will NOT be recorded. We hope that you will be as present as possible during the workshop. This includes having your camera on if you are in a position to do so. The series is not intended to be listened to on the go. Please only sign up if you can be present in a similar way you would at an in-person event.


Special thanks to Jen Solin, my dear friend for nearly 30 years! Jen is the inspiration for this workshop. Check out her heart-centered, nature-inspired coaching here!

Jen Solin and Rachel Frida Siegel, 1999

Frequently Asked Questions

Do I have to come to all of the sessions? You can attend the first session for free and decide after if you want to register for sessions II and III. Each session of the series builds on the previous one. You must attend the first (free) session if you want to register for the second and third sessions. You need to pay for both session II and III together. If you are unable to attend both, there is no discount to register for just one of them.

What if I can’t afford $99? No one will be turned away for lack of funds. Please email rachel@towardliberation.net and let her know.

Is this program for me? I’ve never done any work around racism.  This series is for you regardless of where you are on your anti-racism journey. People who are newer to these conversations will be exposed to new skills and concepts. All participants will have opportunities to put the information into practice. 

Is this program for me? I’ve done a lot of work around racism already. This series is for you regardless of where you are on your anti-racism journey. For people who are further along in their racial identity development and anti-oppression analysis, the workshop will strengthen and fortify their commitments. All participants will have opportunities to put the information into practice. 

Why is it designed for LGBTQI community members? As people who experience sexism, homophobia and/or transphobia, we benefit from affinity spaces by gender and sexuality. It can be hard to be fully authentic and vulnerable in “mixed” spaces especially if we fear someone will stereotype or discriminate against us. Our common experiences will help us hold one another as we learn and grow together.

What do you mean by “white people”? Race is not a biological category. It is a social category that was invented by humans in order to create a hierarchy that puts people categorized as white at the top and dehumanizes others. These racial categories, including who is included in whiteness, change over time. Even though race is a social construct, the impact of racism is real. Because of racism, it is important to recognize race. Whiteness is a racial category that generally applies to people with European ancestry. If you are bi- or multi-racial, you may still benefit from this workshop series. Feel free to reach out to rachel@towardliberation.net with any questions.

Why is this workshop series designed for white people? White people working together to unlearn racism is critical to building multi-racial resistance. Creating separate groups by race is NOT AN END GOAL but an important part of the work. White people need space to process how they benefit from and how they are harmed by racism. Doing this work in a multi-racial environment often causes harm to people of color and also inhibits white people from speaking vulnerably and honestly. This is an opportunity for us as white people to do our own work and be fully authentic about where we fall short and the impact of it, and it creates an opportunity for us to hold each other to account. We call this a racial caucus and it will prepare us to be better able to be in multiracial spaces and relationships.

How will the sessions be structured? Each session will include education, introspection, and interaction and will lead to new ways to perceive and be in the world. There will be small group discussion, large group discussion, activities, videos, and more. There will be information-sharing from the facilitator but they are not structured as lectures. The workshops are structured with the assumption that participants will have their cameras on and be as present as possible.

Is there homework? Yes. You will be assigned approximately 30 minutes of work per week outside of class time.

Who and where is the facilitator? The workshops are facilitated by Rachel Frida Siegel. Rachel is a white, Ashkenazi Jewish, pansexual woman on Abenaki land in Burlington, Vermont, USA. You can read more about her here. The workshop series was developed and will be led primarily through a United States lens.

What gives Rachel, a white woman, the ability to talk about racism? Rachel works with and financially compensates a group of equity advisors with different cultural backgrounds and identities. Whenever facilitating programs that relate to an identity that Rachel does not hold, she works with one of her advisors who does hold that identity to support her program development. Having decades of experience co-facilitating anti-racism workshops with people of color, Rachel has been asked by her advisor team to sometimes do this work without them being present. Whether she is co-facilitating or facilitating alone, Rachel always has people with lived experience of racism review her agenda and debrief after each program. She gives at least 20% of her income to her advisors to compensate them for their expertise. 

What is Rachel’s gender and sexual orientation? Rachel identifies as queer. She is cis, pansexual, and poly in a long term nesting relationship with a cis man. She is “straight” passing at times and leverages that access whenever she is able. She will work with an advisor who does not have this privilege for the development of this workshop.

Accessibility: We strive to make the workshops available to all who want to participate. If you have a need or request for something to enable you to better access the workshop, please let us know.