by Talitha Fraser with Kaumatua Gregg Morris
Allow me to invite you to join in for a game of kilikiti, to sing and dance with us, to walkabout… sit here at the campfire and I will tell you story…
Coranderrk was one of several Aboriginal missions set up in Victoria . Wurundjeri leaders William Barak and Simon Wonga advocated for Aboriginal people to live in their own place, their own way. Many times to petition the Victorian Government Barak and Wonga would gather a delegation together, speak to motivate and inspire them, then they would walk together the 60 miles (12 hours) to deliver the message: “Please leave us alone, give us our land back, don’t take it away again”. Leaders of one people to another, approaching as equal and in person. Continue reading ““I am, We are, He/She/It is”: Learnings from the South Pacific”
Seventh Sunday After the Epiphany
From the Intro to Rev. William Barber’s
By Joanna Shenk, February 5, 2017, First Mennonite Church of San Francisco
By Grecia Lopez-Reyes, Organizer with Clergy and Laity United for Economic Justice, originally posted on the
From Howard Zinn’s The People’s History of the United States (1980):
From Fannie Lou Hamer:
By Em Jacoby. Part of our series on food and discipleship
An exclusive RadicalDiscipleship.Net interview with Ryan Newson, professor of religion, philosophy and ethics at Campbell University. He is the author of 