What a week. It started off with U.S. Secretary of Transportation Ray LaHood telling Georgia that it needs to get its act together when it comes to high-speed rail and transit. Although LaHood didn’t tell us anything we didn’t already know, it’s always reaffirming to have the most powerful transportation official in the country tell state leaders that they’ve been asleep at the switch. “There has to be a commitment by state government that transit is important,” LaHood, one of the key Republicans in President Barack Obama’s administration, said in an interview with Atlanta Journal-Constitution’s Jay Bookman. As we all know, the state of Georgia does not invest in MARTA,
Ryan Rodriguez

By Ryan Rodriguez, grants manager, Community Foundation for Greater Atlanta

The Community Foundation for Greater Atlanta regularly posts book reviews on topics related to philanthropy on its blog. Here’s a recent selection.

When I made the decision to enter the philanthropic sector nearly 20 years ago, I did so out of a deeply embedded sense of wanting to give back some of the goodness that I had received – and continue to receive. A kind of balancing the scales of fortune, if you will.

In Decolonizing Wealth, Edgar Villanueva offers a thought-provoking analysis of philanthropy through the lens of his Native American belief system. An award-winning practitioner in the field of philanthropy, Villanueva argues that philanthropy and other financial institutions perpetuate the colonial tenets of division, control and exploitation.

He begins by sharing his “journey into the heart of philanthropy, past the field’s glamorous, altruistic façade, into its shadows.” At times, it’s an uncomfortable journey and he comes through with seven steps to healing; ideas on what we can do to decolonize the institutions and processes around money – where we “embrace a new paradigm of connect, relate, belong.”

This may be a radical view to some of the philanthropic sector, and I think it encourages all of us to ask ourselves some difficult questions as we continue to tackle the tough work of healing our communities.

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