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On a residential block in upstate New York, college students dig and sift backyard dirt as part of an archaeological project that could provide insights into the lives of African Americans buried ...
Reclaiming was founded in 1979, in the context of the Reclaiming Collective (1978–1997), by two Neopagan women of Jewish descent, Starhawk and Diane Baker, in order to explore and develop feminist Neopagan emancipatory rituals. [1] Today, the organization focuses on progressive social, political, environmental and economic activism. [2]
This led to the formation of a national group called the Colored Spiritualist Association of Churches, and within a few years there were Black Spiritualist churches in Chicago, Detroit, Philadelphia, and many other cities. [2] [3] During the decade preceding World War II, the Spiritual churches of New York City were well documented in print and ...
The Ausar Auset Society is a Pan-African spiritual organization founded in 1973 by Ra Un Nefer Amen. [1]It is based in Brooklyn, New York, with chapters in several major cities in the United States as well as international chapters in London, England, Toronto, Canada, Bermuda and Trinidad & Tobago.
Pierre Toussaint (1766-1853): Credited as the father of Catholic Charities in New York Harris’s portrayal of Tolton was part of a Nov. 17 event honoring the six Black men and women up for sainthood.
"We Resist" banner at the Queer Liberation March in New York City in 2019. The Reclaim Pride Coalition was created to gather members of the extended LGBT community, especially those most at its fringes – such as gender nonconforming individuals, queer youth of color, drag queens, sex workers, and radical lesbians – who seek to march in honor of the 50th Anniversary of the Stonewall riots ...
According to LeanIn.org and McKinsey & Company’s 2023 Women In the Workplace Report, “Black women are three times more likely than white women and men to have to code-switch.” This practice ...
Following her years at UCLA, after a failed attempt to become a fiction writer in New York City, Starhawk returned to California. She became active in the Neopagan community in the San Francisco Bay Area, and trained with Victor Anderson, founder of the Feri Tradition of witchcraft, and with Zsuzsanna Budapest, a feminist separatist involved in Dianic Wicca.