Browse Items (465 total)

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

Embrace Contradition.jpg
We exist in a world where we have multiple and sometimes contradictory identities within ourselves. How do you navigate who you are, when who you are is sometimes at odds with itself?

RHP_2.jpg
Her work as a rabbi is accomplished through a mission she started called Abyssinian Reform Hebrew Congregations. Hernandez-Perez said she is from the same line of rabbis which goes back to Rabbi Arnold Ford and Rabbi Wentworth Matthew and many other…

31-103477.jpg
Daitokuzan Johoji Temple is the official name of this sacred space. The name was changed after Nun Shibatani's predecessor passed on to her the responsibility for this temple. Accepting the mantle bequeathed to her, Nun Shibatani nicknamed the place,…

Jeanelle_Ablola.jpg
“We must be solidarious, meaning one with everybody, with the care of the planet, and we must be willing to accompany people’s movements for their rights, justice, peace. And so I put my education and my experience and my commitment to that service.”…

1. Decolonize Stories - Seek, learn, share and affirm the distinct histories of BIPOC communities; and unlearn dominant narratives

2. Develop a Power Analysis - Consider how each BIPOC community is differently situated in the racial hierarchy and…

9780226322438.jpg
Slumming is the concept of people seeing 'how the other half lives.' ...[and] Heap sees four phases of slumming... The red light phase ran from the 1880s to WW1, which overlapped the bohemian phase during the 1910s and 1920s. The Negro phase, perhaps…

Ecological Revolutions cover.jpg
In Ecological Revolutions, Carolyn Merchant considers two major transformations in New England between 1600 and 1860.

European colonization ravaged indigenous societies and land across the entire continental masses of the Americas. Indigenous…

Trans spiritual expression has evolved in the context of rapid ecological decline since the late 1800s. At times trans people have lived and worshipped near Native Americans. However, the cross-fertilization of their spiritual values was not seen as…

African Burial Ground National Monument.jpg
The movements of its free and enslaved residents, even when and where they could bury their dead, was highly regulated in an attempt to preclude insurrections.

This community existed in an area gutted by immanent domain when the city took the land…

African Burial Ground National Monument.jpg
At least 15,000 of those nonwhites who were not allowed to be buried in the white church cemetery were buried instead in an area reserved for Africans that was excavated during construction. Only a few graves are visible in the memorial, and some of…
Output Formats

atom, csv, dcmes-xml, json, omeka-xml, rss2