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De Colores
By Mary Dispenza
A photo tells a thousand stories and evokes memories. I paint and photograph subjects that matter to me. The people of Mexico and Hispanic descent matter to me. I spent time serving and caring for children and teaching art in an orphanage in Mexico called Nuestros Pequenos Hermanos y Hermanas. That experience, so different from my white self, privilege, and culture opened my eyes and heart. We are connected. We want the same things – peace, love, justice, equality and a better life and environment for ourselves and our children. That is why so many immigrants seek homes in America. At our best, that is who we are, and what we give.
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In the Days Before My Best Friend Became a White Supremacist
By Robert Beveridge
I would open my flesh
along the perforations
scoop out the excess
fat, tendons, Nigerian
movie trivia, lo mein.
In those days Myspace
was everyone’s favorite
destination, we all knew
each other, we all knew
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Revelate
By Luzene Hill
A world in balance and equilibrium was the prevailing philosophy, as well as the structure of society, on this continent prior to 1492. Olin (motion-change) is the Nahuatl word given to the natural rhythms of the universe, from beating hearts to earthquakes. These cultural foundations were buried by the white noise of patriarchal colonialism.
The rhythm of a world in balance is here.
It has always been here.
“Revelate” revels in Indigenous culture rising up. The pulsing rhythm is resounding, exploding back into the world – through female figures of energy and power.
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The Art of Hate
By Russell Willis
Masquerading as instinct
something ingrained, embedded
in the mind
the heart
or soul
reflexive triggered as fight or flight
But not
Not instinct
A choice it is
this thing called hate
a decision made by someones
then shared
decisions
strings of decisions
whole family trees of decisions
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Violence
By Heather Marie Scholl
1a: the use of physical force so as to injure, abuse, damage, or destroy
Violence is a slippery term, sliding between definitions with the turn of a phrase. Is it the violence in the imagination of white people, or the violence forced upon the bodies of Black people? Can violence be the assault of an object? Or does violence require mourning, trauma? If we label destruction of property as violence does it imbue it with personhood? As if it might bleed when broken, a family of shutters and doors mourning the loss of a window.
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My Privilege
By James Croal Jackson
I’m privileged to sit in my home on a sunny day
with just a headache
in late May two thousand twenty. God I feel
plenty guilty. My friends
are linking hands in the street and I am scared
of all that’s viral. Oh what has lingered
in the air since, yes, America.
I have wept with internet videos
in my shadowed home,
never gassed
standing up for what is right.