Tamera Marko (she/her)

Boston, MA & Medellín, Colombia

Tamera Marko has been in awe of the power of stories and silences her entire life. She grew up in the Tijuana-San Diego border region. Among her first teachers were elders who, forced to flee violence in their countries, had recently arrived in the United States from Vietnam, the Philippines, El Salvador, Guatemala, Nicaragua, and Mexico. In this little place on the planet where people work hard for the American Dream, we knew that everything would not automatically be okay. Tamera’s childhood city has walls and armed officers surveilling a border. It also has miles of Pacific Ocean where sea life knows no borders. This can teach us to look up for another horizon, something organically life giving, to ask what is possible?    Our elders’ kitchen tables, the most joyful wise places she Tamera has experienced, taught me the responsibility of holding spaces to deeply listen. This listening is not just a matter of love — it is about survival. Here, she first learned that we make policies, practices and decisions based on stories we hear and share. For thirty years, and in the last decade in Boston, Tamera has been dedicated to what stories can do to disrupt structural violence. She worked as a human rights journalist in the Americas, Africa and Asia; an historian of legacies of slavery; faculty in history, Writing Studies and art; and in ongoing collaboration at the Universidad Nacional de Colombia and with desplazadas and community leaders in Colombia. In our world’s most powerful knowledge constructing spaces, people most impacted by violence rarely share stories in their own words for listeners they identify as important. Tamera contributed to this silence by publishing stories that “spoke for” instead of by and with. This inspired her dedication to story circles in visual and performance art, music, written word and other forms, led by people with deep knowledge about humanity, resilience, healing and community. We hold space for radical listening — building authentic relationships to co-create paths for social justice and liberation.

“To me, social justice is a process, it’s not a product. And it’s a living, breathing practice. And what’s most important for me is that both of the words, uh, are equally active ... and consciously, intentionally, um, being embodied and practiced individually and communally…. social justice means you’re working, uh, radically, uh, which means, you know, at the root, you’re working for root change….So to me, social justice is when we’re working within those systems that we’re trying to step out of, we’re trying to obliterate or get rid of or, you know, and liberation is something where we’re imagining something different.”