-
Life
Small church fed, housed, transported, and advised at least 225 UUs who joined the Selma-to-Montgomery march in 1965.
Elaine McArdle -
UU News
Bronze monument commemorates three civil rights martyrs killed in Alabama in 1965.
Christopher L. Walton -
Editorial
The do-it-yourself fellowship movement spread Unitarian congregations far and wide between 1948 and the 1960s, but its legacy is complicated.
Warren R. Ross -
Ideas
Although his true villains are never redeemed, Dickens’ novels demonstrate that good wins in the end.
Susan Jhirad -
Editorial
Twenty-five years after Bob West navigated the denomination through the painful and divisive 1970s, he is regarded by many as the ‘unsung hero of the UUA.’
Warren R. Ross -
UU News
More than 500 Unitarian Universalists join 50th anniversary march in Selma, Alabama.
Christopher L. Walton, Elaine McArdle -
Editorial
What changed for me after Michael Brown’s death in Ferguson.
Christopher L. Walton -
Editorial
In the past, our religious forebears had stood on the brink of making a difference in racial justice, and had wavered. Not this time.
Mark Morrison-Reed -
Ideas
How a man whose passions were religious freedom and the abolition of slavery came to be known as the father of American Christmas trees.
Kris Willcox -
Ideas
Some date back to the 1600s, but 59 percent were founded in the last sixty years.
Christopher L. Walton -
Editorial
Four decades have passed since controversy over ‘black empowerment’ nearly tore the Unitarian Universalist Association apart. Even now, UUs remain unreconciled over what was for many a life-defining fight.
Mark Morrison-Reed -
Editorial
Reclaiming the legacy of Margaret Fuller, the forgotten intellectual at the heart of the Transcendentalist movement and the first American theorist of women’s equality.
Kimberly French