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UU News
“It’s not enough to say black lives matter—you have to believe it, and to live it.”
Kenny Wiley -
UU News
‘Everyone who was getting put on the ground was black, Mexican, Arabic,’ Brooks, who is white, said. ‘[The cop] didn’t even look at me. It was kind of like I was invisible.’
Kenny Wiley -
UU News
Teams of journalists and civilians are tracking down the numbers, and the stories behind them.
Christopher L. Walton -
Blog
A new study finds that suicide rates for black children ages 5 to 11 have leapt in recent years, while decreasing for white kids.
Elaine McArdle -
UU News
$3,000 from James Reeb Fund presented to First Unitarian Church of Baltimore.
Elaine McArdle -
Ideas
Frances E. W. Harper (1825–1911) challenged us to practice a religion of justice.
Kenny Wiley -
Life
Virginia Volker recalls a lifetime of working for a more just Alabama.
Elaine McArdle -
Life
More than two dozen Unitarian Universalist congregations have put Black Lives Matter banners on their buildings.
Kenny Wiley -
Editorial
After fifty years, the families and friends of three civil rights martyrs return to Selma, still weighing the price they had to pay.
Amy K. Nelson -
Life
Small church fed, housed, transported, and advised at least 225 UUs who joined the Selma-to-Montgomery march in 1965.
Elaine McArdle -
Blog
Mothers for Justice United and the Coalition for Justice marched for justice for black men, women, and children killed by police and vigilante violence.
Kenneth Sutton -
Life
A black Baltimore Unitarian Universalist marches for Freddie Gray, her city, and her faith.
Kenny Wiley