Moko Jumbies are stilt walkers that wear colorful clothing and appear at festivals and celebrations throughout the Caribbean. Thrillist's Vanita Salisbury visited St. Croix, in the U.S. Virgin Islands, to learn about this 200-year-old tradition and the people that are keeping it alive.
Are you kidding me? Tell me people have no doubt about what to do.
—@clayrivers
Includes articles on:
💛 Editor’s Letter
💛 Why Orgs Fail at DEI
💛 the Holidays and the Enslaved
💛 Racism in Public Education
A Course on How Newspapers Covered Lynchings
and a quote by Lorraine Hansberry.
Are you kidding me? Tell me people have no doubt about what to do.
—@clayrivers
Includes articles on:
Editor’s Letter
Why Orgs Fail at DEI
the Holidays and the Enslaved
Racism in Public Education
A Course on How Newspapers Covered Lynchings
and a quote by Lorraine Hansberry.
▶️ good morning once again and welcome to this week's edition of my #SoulfulSunday music thread! please give me a bit to compile the first few songs i'm gonna post—get comfy and get iiiiiinnnnnnnnn~ 🧵👇🏾
According to the Government Accountability Office, in the school year 2018–19, one in four students experienced bullying related to their race, national origin, religion, disability, gender, or sexual orientation.
—Charles Estacious White
@TheConversationUS@blackmastodon There are sooo many white Dahl fans who are about to leap to Wonka's defense it's not even funny. (I say this from my perch as a Gene Wilder fan.)
P.S. to The Conversation: I tagged the actual #BlackMastodon group, and I hope that was your intent.
According to the Government Accountability Office, in the school year 2018–19, one in four students experienced bullying related to their race, national origin, religion, disability, gender, or sexual orientation.
—Charles Estacious White
America's biggest shopping mall hosted its first African American Father Christmas this year - but black Santas have been around for decades and even played a role in the civil rights movement.