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Raising Children of Color: a round table discussion

September 2, 2020

6:30 pm

Venue

AFFCNY Network


new york

646-688-4321

Adoptive and Foster Family Coalition of New York


Organizer

Discussions on the Intersections of Race and Adoption I

Join us in the AFFCNY Network for an intimate conversation with parents of color, raising children of color. 

During this candid and casual conversation, we will dive deep and explore some of the common questions asked by white parents who have adopted children of color. For example, “How do you talk to your kids about race?”

This event will be facilitated by adoptees McDonald Morris, our Youth Program Coordinator and Sarah Gotowka, one of our Central New York Family Support Specialists. Mac and Sarah will be joined by three incredible parents of color, raising children of color, whom also are Coalition affiliates and team members.

Antoinette Sumter-Cotman has been a licensed foster parent for 29 years and is a mother of seven children, including three adopted sons. She is retired from the City University of New York (CUNY) and is President of Share Family Support, a parent led foster/adoptive parent support and advocacy group in Queens.


Deborah Francis is the owner of Integra Accounting and Bookkeeping Services. Deborah earned her BBA at CUNY Baruch College and her Master of Business Administration degree with a focus on forensic accounting. When not working on her business, Deborah loves spending time with her only grandbaby, in her gardens, traveling and reading.


Chet Jackson is an adoptee, an adoptive father of three teens, and a birth father of two. He is also a former adoption professional and a former foster parent, adoptive father of three teens. Chet lives in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.


McDonald Morris was born in Harlem and raised in Brooklyn. Mac is an adult adoptee, black queer performance artist, educator and movement enthusiast now based in Ithaca. His artistic, professional and philanthropic work emphasizes critical-consciousness and love as essential ingredients for empowerment, positive transformation, and optimal well-being.


Sarah Gotowka was born in South Korea and adopted as an infant. She grew up in the suburbs of Rochester New York with her Polish-Italian Roman Catholic family. Sarah has been working for AFFCNY for over three years as a family support specialist, youth adoptee mentor, and trans-racial adoption discussion group facilitator.

Register Now and Join Us in the AFFCNY Network!

Events will be held in the AFFCNY Network; a free support network for New York’s adoptive, foster and kinship communities. Please register to join us for the whole Discussions on the Intersections of Race and Adoption series!

By |2020-08-26T11:39:45-04:00August 25th, 2020|

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