Aziza Hasan and Andrea Hodos
When their communities were hurting in the wake of Colleyville, Aziza and Andrea returned to their resilient relationships.
When their communities were hurting in the wake of Colleyville, Aziza and Andrea returned to their resilient relationships.
Connection destroyed at the expense of productivity, culture at the expense of assimilation.
It’s been kind of mind-bending—the idea of something that’s free, the idea of citizens taking charge of abandoned, empty, vandalized space and turning it into public good, the ability to find purpose and possibility in an empty space.
During this season of narrowness and liberation, what will you do to help foster true and lasting safety in your communities? How will you support Asian and other oppressed peoples who have been fighting for their liberation for decades?
So. I don’t know about you, but I never thought we’d be here. Saying goodbye to Sukkot, the grand festival of rejoicing, the time when we celebrate harvest, honor abundance,… Read more »
We are living in uncertain times. In Argentina, my home, the flights are almost totally suspended and the feeling of confinement and distance becomes more evident. I am an artist… Read more »
“When we stop making people ‘the other,’ when we know a little more about someone, maybe we can live in a less divided and more inclusive, safer, world.”