The brutal killing of George Floyd on a Minneapolis street on May 25, 2020, compelled a tsunami of grief and rage, igniting demonstrations around the world.
For University of Virginia students Milania Harris and Zahra Alisa, though, it also birthed a movement for nurses at a school and university still coming to grips with its history of exploitation, bigotry and inequality.
“Nurses need to acknowledge the history of discrimination within health care so they don’t continue these discriminatory patterns,” said Alisa, a third-year nursing student from Burke. “Our main goal is for people to come out of UVA nursing school aware of how to care of people of all ٲ.”
But after an initial emotional virtual gathering with peers after Floyd’s death, Harris and Alisa perceived a familiar pattern among their peers and professors: the outrage, blunted by time, softened. Helplessness and inaction prevailed. The electricity of fury spurred by the latest round of Black Americans’ deaths, even in a community that suffered through the horror of a white supremacists’ rally on Aug. 11 and 12, 2017, and still isolated by a worldwide pandemic, had already begun to wane.
Heartsick, Harris and Alisa exchanged texts and held several intense, hours-long Zoom meetings together, drafting plans for a new student group with a sizable ambition: to feed learning and historical context, urge self-reflection and self-education, confront and remedy implicit bias, bigotry, racism, homophobia – and a host of other “-isms.” Advocates for Medical Equality was born.