Google.org, the philanthropic arm of the tech giant, announced Friday that it is donating $3 million in new grants to organizations dedicated to fighting racial injustice in the Bay Area, where the company is based.
The company is teaming up with San Francisco’s My Brother and Sister’s Keeper program; Oakland’s pro-“community responsive” teaching Roses in Concrete Community School; Beyond12, an education resource service for low income and first generation students; as well as author/activist Bryan Stevenson and the Equal Justice Initiative (EJI), which is a national nonprofit.
“Each of these organizations and their leaders have shown a deep, fundamental understanding of racial injustice and are actively finding ways to rid our systems of social, educational and economic exclusion. We as a company are proud to support them,” Justin Steele, principal at Google.org, said in a blog post released on Friday.
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Last year, Google.org gave $2.35 million in grants to community organizations, and Steele sees potential for their recent spate of investments in social justice activism to go national with a goal of achieving universal access to information and changing narratives on the subject of race by “using technology to create empathy.”
“We haven’t fully confronted the history of racial injustice in the country,” Steele told MSNBC on Friday. “We have to be willing to be uncomfortable and do uncomfortable things.” In the announcement of the new grants on Friday, Google did not shy away from name-checking African-American victims of gun violence and/or alleged police brutality, including Tamir Rice, Sandra Bland, Michael Brown and Jordan Davis. The company has even screened a documentary on Davis, who was shot and killed while unarmed ostensibly for playing loud music in a gas station parking lot in the fall of 2012, for its employees and members of urban communities around the country.









