• Cultural Calendar
National BIPOC/Minority Mental Health Awareness Month

Originally founded as National Minority Mental Health Awareness Month, BIPOC Mental Health Month is observed every July, and it shines an essential spotlight on the unique mental health challenges and needs of those racial and ethnic groups that are historically disenfranchised or oppressed in the United States.

It’s a sad fact today that those who are members of the BIPOC (Black, Indigenous, and People of Color) community, alongside other minority groups, too often continue to face disproportionate and unfair inequities in care, support, or mental health services in the U.S. Years of systemic racism, combined with historical barriers and inequities have left many ethnic, racial and minoritized populations facing trauma, loss, bias, social disparities and other unique challenges that have gone unsupported and largely unaddressed.

The founder and original driving force behind National Minority Health Awareness Month was author and advocate Bebe Moore Campbell, who was the co-founder of the National Alliance of Mental Illness, Urban Los Angeles.

In 2005, Campbell was a leader in the community who had spent much of her time passionately campaigning for improved mental health education as well as better mental healthcare facilities for those in impoverished communities. That year, alongside her friend Linda Wharton-Boyd, in an effort to make mental health facilities accessible for all, Campbell suggested dedicating an entire month to the effort. The effort led to the launch of National Minority Mental Health Awareness Month, which was quickly supported by The Department of Mental Health, who supported the effort with public news conferences to encourage BIPOC citizens to care for their mental health and well-being, get mental health checkups, and end the stigma against mental illness.

Awareness of BIPOC Mental Health Awareness Month helps to ensure that mental health resources are equally available to all.

More info: Mental Health Resources for underrepresented communities: https://afsp.org/mental-health-resources-for-underrepresented-communities

Archive

September is Suicide Prevention Awareness Month

September is Suicide Prevention Awareness Month, offering an ideal opportunity to speak out and raise awareness on this vital topic — an awareness that is urgently required, with suicide the tenth leading cause of death among adults in the U.S. — and the second leading cause of death among children and young people aged 10–24. Unfortunately, these rates are increasing, and those who are young, LGBTQ, or BIPOC are especially vulnerable. LGBTQ youth are four times more likely to attempt suicide, while transgender adults, meanwhile, are almost 12 times more likely than the general population to attempt suicide.

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Memorializing the Horrors of the Transatlantic Slave Trade, on Slavery Remembrance Day

Created by UNESCO to memorialize the horrors of the transatlantic slave trade, Slavery Remembrance Day, also known as International Day for the Remembrance of the Slave Trade and its Abolition, is observed on August 23 worldwide. Upon this day, it's important that we remember that this observance is not only a reminder of the horrors of slavery as we honor its victims—it's also about our dedication across the globe to ensure that slavery, and the racism that caused it, is abolished once and for all.

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Promoting Indigenous Rights on the International Day of the World's Indigenous People

Commemorating the historic meeting of the first United Nations Working Group on Indigenous Populations in 1982, International Day of the World’s Indigenous People (August 9) provides us with the chance to promote the rights of Indigenous People worldwide, while also amplifying their voices, cultures, and accomplishments. In these days of increased concern over climate change, the knowledge and commitment of many indigenous peoples to sustainability and biodiversity may in fact prove crucial to protecting the earth for future generations.

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Looking to the Stars on Women Astronomers Day

Far too often, the history books seem to focus on the men who made the impacts, the men who made the achievements—and then men who looked to the stars. Yet throughout history, the eyes of women have focused on the stars as intensively as men, and to them belong many great achievements and discoveries as they played essential roles in a variety of scientific and astronomical breakthroughs.

Which is why, every August 1, we celebrate Women Astronomers Day.

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Deafblind Awareness Week  —  June 23–30

Deafblind Awareness Week is marked each year during the last week of June in honor of Helen Keller’s birthday on June 27, and first commemorated by President Ronald Reagan. Helen overcame the loss of her sight and hearing in early infancy to become a celebrated representative of the deafblind community and its potential during her lifetime. This year, Deafblind Awareness Week will be observed from June 23 to June 30.

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