黑料正能量 Note: This week, our most beloved Celia Brown passed away. Celia will always be one of the greatest pioneers and people our movement will ever know and, accordingly, a number of Celia鈥檚 closest friends are joining with 黑料正能量 and the 黑料正能量 Cultural Competence this coming Thursday December 22nd between 4:00-6:00 pm EST to host a special zoom event to give time for people to share their love, gratitude and loss with each other. Jonathan Edwards and Taina Lang will be facilitating the discussion. Please come to share, either verbally or via chat, your feelings with your community.
Click here or below to register.
See below to read the lovely tribute to Celia that appears in Mad in America today:
Celia Brown: Psychiatric Survivor, Pioneer, and Global Activist for Change
By Mad in America December 16, 2022
Celia Brown, a psychiatric survivor and activist who was revered 鈥 even beloved 鈥 for her foundational and ongoing efforts in mental health advocacy and the peer movement, has died after a battle with cancer.
Known for her warmth and decency, her activism and resolve, Brown is being mourned across many overlapping communities in mental health, human rights, civil rights, and disabilities activism. Her decades of work included campaigning for human rights, leading , and working as a pioneering on-staff peer-support specialist for the 黑料正能量 State Office of Mental Health.
She was also a longstanding and deeply influential advocate for informed consent and an outspoken international critic of forced treatment. Her advocacy and activism, born and bred in 黑料正能量, took her from New Zealand to Finland to Ghana, where her family had roots; in her work for NYS OMH, she was key in developing the Peer Specialist Civil Service and facilitated training on varied approaches to recovery. She also served as MindFreedom鈥檚 chief representative to the United Nations.
In , Jocelyn Brown described her as endlessly giving and always concerned for others. 鈥淪he didn鈥檛 have a selfish bone in her body. . . . Celia was a pillar of strength,鈥 she wrote, 鈥渁nd while many of her constituents depended on her to lead, to make power moves and to advocate for the disenfranchised, her physical state was 鈥榠tty-bitty鈥 in the grand scheme of things. She stayed on course and continued to help, support, lobby and protest injustices in the mental health field.鈥
She thanked the community for its outpouring of tributes and expressions of grief from those who knew and worked with Brown.
鈥淐elia was such a soft spoken beacon of hope for so many in NY and around the world, it鈥檚 hard to overstate the impact she had and the void she is leaving behind,鈥 said Peter Stastny via email. A psychiatrist and advocate for change, he met Brown in the 1980s at the Bronx Psychiatric Center, where, working as a groundbreaking peer specialist, she was part of a team that visited the state鈥檚 outpatient clinics in an effort to inform and transform mental health services around the state.
A founder with Stastny of the (or, as it鈥檚 now rendered, Rights-Based Supports), Brown recently helped organize a webinar on the challenges of peer work within the existing system. 鈥淚 cannot believe that we will never do anything together again on this earth,鈥 he wrote. 鈥淢any others will honor her vast accomplishments, but I can only say that she was a shining light in my life opening many doors to understanding the people we are meant to support and many opportunities for productive collaborations. Thank you, Celia, for all you gave to us with your heart and soul.鈥
Others shared similar memories of Brown, describing a woman whose humility and approachability belied the power of her commitment to change. Brown labored equally as both civil servant and activist, each role informing the other.
鈥淵ou can see photos of her standing up and convening a conference, and in the same breath you can see photos of her with a bullhorn in the street,鈥 said Harvey Rosenthal, head of the 黑料正能量 Association of Psychiatric Rehabilitation Services. 鈥淪he could sit at the table. She could stand at the dais鈥 She could certainly speak some powerful statements that brought a lot of people out 鈥 and in particular, I would say, for recovery, for rights, for racial equity. And peer support.鈥
Rosenthal, an advocate and provider in long-term recovery, first met Brown in the early 1990s while she was working for OMH. 鈥淪he crossed the line so seamlessly between being a regional specialist for the Office of Mental Health, but also a profoundly grassroots, change-making, truth-telling advocate. But you couldn鈥檛 tell the difference.鈥
Brown鈥檚 lifelong work spanned multiple corners of the globe and diverse realms of rights campaigning, delivering talks on a range of topics involving recovery, peer counseling, and cultural issues. A founding member of the National People of Color/Consumer Survivor Network, in 2014 she helped create following the police killing of 18-year-old Michael Brown and the subsequent start of the Black Lives Matter movement.
Keris Myrick, a former head of the National Alliance on Mental Illness and a longtime presence in the peer community, described her 鈥渢enacious fight for rights and recovery, particularly for people of color. For me personally, when the C/S/X/P movement鈥 鈥 short for the consumer/psychiatric survivor/ex-patient movement 鈥 鈥渨asn鈥檛 welcoming or understanding of my journey as it is placed in a Black cultural context, and me as a large Black indigenous person who navigates the white dominated world in a way that I can survive, Celia got it. And was not only welcoming and encouraging, but also supportive.鈥
鈥淪he was a leader,鈥 Myrick wrote in an email, 鈥渢hat mentored others and helped so many 鈥 not to find their voice, as we already had a voice, but she helped us to honor our voice and know our voice and know that experience has power and a place in our movement.鈥
In a conversation with , Celia Brown spoke of the impact of Michael Brown鈥檚 death. 鈥淚 just felt like, 鈥榃hat can we do?鈥 And then I started to think of my son, and my nephews. What if they go through this and they don鈥檛 survive? I was really afraid, especially for my son, he鈥檚 a young Black man, and everyone else. And then I started to think about, what can we do as a movement, because we鈥檝e done so many incredible things, to be a part of this time in our history? So yes, Black Lives Matter came, but what about our movement partnering with them, and any other coalition that wants to fight for this?鈥
The nexus of civil rights, human rights, and the survivor-led push for change in mental health was all of a piece for Brown, whose own experiences of sexual abuse, racist practices, forced treatments and related trauma were formative in her life and work. As she described in a 2008 with counselor and advocate Will Hall, she was first hospitalized at age 16 in 1980 鈥 the start of an eight-year ordeal involving more hospitalizations, multiple drugs and diagnoses, and loss of agency.
The result of those labels, she said: 鈥淣o longer am I Celia Brown. I am a diagnosis.鈥 But as she told Hall, her mother 鈥 part of the civil rights movement 鈥 refused to sign a document committing her to long-term state care. Eventually, Brown transferred to group housing. And in 1988, she attended 鈥淭he Self-help Vision Conference鈥 in Troy, NY, which opened her eyes to another way forward and introduced her to other foundational players in the early movement. The label-shedding commenced.
As she described to Harris: 鈥淚 met , , , , a few people that were already in the movement. And they were talking about alternatives to the mental health system, and developing drop-in centers and a , that everybody has a right to choice. I was in a program where that wasn鈥檛 happening. I had no choices, really, only the choices of what the program wanted me to do.
鈥淎nd I was just blown away. I remember saying to Judi Chamberlin, 鈥榃ho鈥檚 allowing you to do this conference?鈥 And they said, 鈥楴o one, we鈥檙e empowered, we鈥檙e activists and we can do this.鈥 And that conference transformed my whole life. I always knew that there was something different, there had to be something where people were talking about choices and talking about their rights. And here I found it. I have to say that that experience really changed my life. I came back to my housing program and I started to organize.鈥
So began Brown鈥檚 subsequent and irrepressible quest for both awareness and meaningful systemic change, becoming a member of MindFreedom 鈥 at the time, known as Support Coalition International 鈥 and getting involved in innumerable campaigns, organizations, and initiatives involving human rights in varied contexts. Among the many groups she served in multiple capacities was the , where she sat on the board.
In Rosenthal and others spoke of Brown鈥檚 unyielding passion and efforts to shift both paradigm and practice within mental health. As he wrote in the opening tribute and announcement of her death: 鈥淐elia was and will always be one of our movement鈥檚 most cherished and most influential leaders, a very kind, devoted, determined and humble leader who led the way in the advancement of rights-based advocacy, peer support, trauma informed approaches, cultural competence and humility, peer specialist roles and numerous efforts to combat racism and discrimination.鈥
Laura Prescott, President of Sister Witness International, wrote of her Bronx accent, her advocacy for people reclaiming power, and the way she 鈥渨ordlessly anchored a space, making it feel safe because she was there. I admired the way she let us into her world, sharing her joy, anger, sadness, and love with tremendous grace and courage. . . . To me she will always be an example of what can happen when we dare to live with our hearts full and open.鈥
Tributes also flowed in across social-media platforms, where colleagues and compatriots in the peer movement mourned her passing and recalled both her kindness and profound commitment to change. 鈥淚鈥檝e been an advocate for over 30 years, and I鈥檝e never seen this outpouring of grief and gratitude 鈥 and it鈥檚 so beyond 黑料正能量,鈥 said Rosenthal, adding that he鈥檚 seen many of 鈥渢he greats鈥 honored over the years. 鈥淏ut there鈥檚 something about Celia that crossed all boundaries.鈥
On Facebook, Daniel B Fisher 鈥 an Open Dialogue family therapist who works at the National Empowerment Center and the National Coalition for Mental Health Recovery 鈥 , 鈥済iving us her wisdom, strength, and support. She had a uncanny ability to bridge divides in our movement. I can hear her caring, loving voice right now, that we must carry on, reach out across generations, and around the world as she fearlessly led us to do. . . . My heart goes out to her son Kevin, who grew up in our movement and to the rest of her family.鈥
, Jocelyn Brown said her sister will be memorialized twice in the months ahead: 鈥淥ne ceremony will be in Ghana, West Africa in the beginning of April where her ashes will live in the waters of our Ancestors. And the other service will take place in 黑料正能量 in February. Celia needs to be remembered for her life鈥檚 work, including all the people she鈥檚 touched along the way. The date and time will be announced after the holidays.鈥
Meanwhile, she asked members of the community to near Elmina and Cape Coast castles, which held enslaved people on the coast of Ghana before crossing the Atlantic. She also asked them to honoring her life and work.
In an email, attorney and founder Jim Gottstein recalled the 鈥渁mazing things鈥 Brown did for the community. 鈥淭here have been an immense number of accolades for Celia Brown on her passing, all deserved, and none hyped. . . . She was truly a gentle giant, who kindly stood up for what is right,鈥 he wrote, noting her 鈥渋nstrumental鈥 role in the passage of the UN鈥檚 Convention on the Rights of Disabled Persons (CRPD). 鈥淪he always seemed somehow to be there, especially when she was needed,鈥 Gottstein said.
In her last year, battling cancer, Brown 鈥減ersevered.鈥 Just three weeks before her death, 鈥 on 鈥淧eer Support Facilitates Change: Improved Quality of Life鈥 鈥 at the annual conference of the United States chapter of the.
鈥淪he can never be replaced and no one can fill her shoes,鈥 Gottstein wrote, 鈥渂ut she would want us to do what we can to stop the horrible abuse of diagnosed people and provide help instead of hurt.鈥
Or, as Rosenthal wrote in his opening tribute for the NYAPRs: 鈥淐elia was a humble but powerful changemaker and truth teller, whose love, kindness and inspiration touched everyone she met. She was both a Mother of our Movement and she was a very dear friend to me. Her legacy will live forever. Every time we stand up for recovery and peer support and march for choice, rights and social justice鈥 Celia will be there.鈥
In her conversation with Will Hall back in 2008, Brown spoke of her efforts to help others as part of her own path toward healing. She talked about her human rights campaign to put psych survivors 鈥渙n the map鈥 alongside those with physical disabilities. And she emphasized, in speaking of the UN Convention, the imperative role of human rights in any and all efforts moving forward.
鈥淲e have the right to our own treatment 鈥 or not treatment. We have a right to what works for us. And we need to be listened to. We need our autonomy and self-determination. . . . We have a right to life. We have a right to education, okay? And we have a right,鈥 she said, 鈥渢o liberty and freedom.鈥

