Browse Items (465 total)

  • Collection: The Historical Development of BIPOC Trans-spiritual Leadership

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This organization worked with clergy, lay leaders and congregations. Its members strove to secure protections and inclusion for LGBT people in churches or houses of worship.http://www.lgbtfaithleadersofafricandescent.com

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Kapaemahu is a multimedia education and community engagement project rooted in Hawaiian culture and dedicated to acceptance, respect, and inclusion for all. It is based on the story of four large stones that were long ago placed on Waikiki beach as a…

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Keynote speeches of the initial Transfaith Summit that in the following year (2010) became a series of TransFaith in Color Conferences. Valerie Spencer is the executive director of the Transcend Empowerment Institute. Jamison Green is an…

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The movement's motto, which signaled to black LGBTQ communities that safe spiritual access would finally be provided, proclaimed that 'God is love and love is for everyone.'

When it comes to taking action on her beliefs, Hernandez-Perez credits the spark of Tikkun Olam.

"I don't think I was ever not involved," she said. "It's just the right thing to do."

A 2017 survey of the forms of violence being displayed on social media that consuming users regard as entertainment.

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He reinterprets an ancient a thousand-year-old Passover song in terms of how it applies to the struggle against racism and the theme of 'black lives matter.'

In 2017, Escaping Agra was awarded the CAAMFest AT&T award, the Spotlight Documentary Film Gold award, and Transcreen Short Film Audience Award.

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Working against violence in Native communities, this organization advocates no more missing indigenous women, girls, and two spirit people. https://actionnetwork.org/groups/twin-ports-no-more-mmiw-mmiwg2s-great-lakes

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A report showing advocacy groups and the media how to effectively and ethically use eyewitness videos to document and report on violence affecting the LGBTQ community.

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Of particular interest in the clipping are two notations: 1) Countee Cullen, like other African American LGBTQ luminaries of the Harlem Rennaissance, felt compelled to hide their sexual and gender identities as members of the Salem United Methodist…
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