The new mission emphasizes our role as allies and advocates, not just funders, in supporting changemakers across our region, including those from the Indigenous communities of 76 Native nations. Most importantly, the mission reflects our shift from poverty reduction to overcoming historical and ongoing injustice. Kevin notes inspiration by Bryan Stevenson’s insight that “the opposite of poverty is not wealth but justice.”
The mission change reflects our longtime work on JEDI.
We began our JEDI journey in 2017, back before we adopted a focus on justice and simply referred to it as a journey to make diversity, equity, inclusion (DEI) a part of everything we do as a foundation. This year marks our eighth year on the journey, and JEDI has been at the heart of our work since 2020.
Just as vital as the participation of our staff on this journey has been the participation of our board, not only how they’ve fully embraced our support of justice-driven work but how they actually “walk the talk.” No JEDI, or DEI, journey can be successful without the board joining along.
Kevin’s blog “Boards Can Be Allies on the DEI Journey” puts on full display the critical role of boards in advancing JEDI work, especially amidst societal backlash. With so many corporations and institutions recently walking back their support for DEI efforts, our board is setting an example for how to be a powerful ally in work for justice.
It’s also helpful to hear directly from board members to witness firsthand the impact of the journey. And guess what? The journey not only advances JEDI but improves boards’ overall effectiveness. We emphasized this in a new video launched in October.