Category Archives: Racial Justice

Alternatives to Gentrification panel at Beloved August 2nd

Public opinion about Birmingham’s redevelopment has shifted from one of outright support to the acknowledgement that it is uneven.

A panel of experts will explore alternatives to gentrification; specifically, the cooperative economy and ongoing projects in the region and from around the world.

Panelists include Randall Woodfin, Board Member of Birmingham Board of Education; Myeisha Hutchinson, Oak Ridge Park Neighborhood President; Susan Diane Mitchell, President of Dynamite Hill-Smithfield Community Land Trust; Dr. Zac Henson, professor-owner at The Cooperative New School; and Samir Rohlin Hazboun, Highlander Research and Education Center. Moderated by Reverend Majadi Baruti of Udja Temple Ministries.

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Memorial Service for Orlando, June 15th, 8-9 pm

Join us in a vigil of prayer, silence, conversation, and creative expression to remember the lives of those killed and injured at the Pulse nightclub in Orlando. We will grieve the senseless bloodshed and pray to end violence and discrimination against LGBTQIA+ people everywhere.

Offered by The Abbey, Baptist Church of the Covenant, Beloved Community Church, Birmingham Friends Meeting, Covenant Community ChurchPilgrim Church UCC, Saint Junia UMC, and Woodlawn UMC.

We will meet outdoors between Beloved and The Abbey, weather permitting (131 41st Street South, Birmingham, AL 35222). If it is raining, we’ll be inside one or both of the buildings.

Contact Jennifer Sanders for more information.

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Moral Revival, June 6th, 6:30 at New Pilgrim Baptist Church

Monday, June 6, 6:30-8:30 pm

New Pilgrim Baptist Church

708 Goldwire Place SW

Birmingham, AL 35211

RSVP on Eventbrite

The Revival: Time for a Moral Revolution of Values, led by the Rev. Dr. William J. BarberII, Rev. Dr. James A. Forbes, Jr., Rev. Traci Blackmon and Sister Simone Campbell, aims to be the catalyst for a resurgence of moral political activism among people of conscience and faith leaders. Far too much of our national political discourse and activity have been poisoned by the dominance of regressive immoral and hateful policy directed toward communities of color, the poor, the sick, our children, immigrants, women, voting rights, the environment and religious minorities. We still have too much racism, materialism and militarism.

Our country is in need of a moral revolution of values to champion the sacred values of love, justice and mercy in the public square. We cannot remain silent.

 

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99 Films presents Bastards of the Party, Thursday, June 28th, 7 pm

Bastards of the Party is a 2005 documentary film produced by Alex Demyanenko and directed by former Bloods gang-member Cle Sloan.

The film explores the creation of two of Los Angeles’s most notorious gangs, the Crips and the Bloods, from the perspective of the Los Angeles community. The film also denounces gang violence and presents meaningful solutions from former gang-members to stop this problem.

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99 Films are presented by Birmingham Institute for Social Change and Magic City Agriculture Project. These films are chosen to inspire, critique and educate the public about racial justice and community development.

RSVP and more info on Facebook.

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99 Films presents Free Angela and All Political Prisoners Thursday, May 24th

Free Angela and All Political Prisoners is Shola Lynch’s documentary about the scholar and activist Angela Davis and her 1972 murder trial. Join Birmingham Institute for Social Change for their monthly movie and discussion group. The film will start at 7 pm, and will be followed by a brief discussion.

This event will have a potluck-style snack bar. All are welcome to bring a snack for yourself or to share.

Magic City Agriculture Project and Birmingham Institute for Social Change will accept STRICTLY VOLUNTARY donations at the event.

[Optional] RSVP on Facebook.

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99 Films screening of Black Power Mixtape Tuesday, April 19th, 7 pm

Join Magic City Agriculture Project and Birmingham Institute for Social Change for another movie in their series of films on race.

Featuring footage shot by a group of Swedish journalists documenting the Black Power Movement in the United States and edited together by Göran Hugo Olsson, the filmmaker behind our first 99 Films choice: Concerning Violence.

$5 suggested donation.
Light refreshments provided.

RSVP on Facebook

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Lenten Reflection from Rev. Lawton Higgs: Praxis

Luke 4: 5-8 Then the devil led him up and showed him in an instant all the kingdoms of the world. And the devil said to him, “To you I will give their glory and all this authority; for it has been given over to me, and I give it to anyone I please. If you, then, will worship me, it will all be yours.” Jesus answered him, “It is written, ‘Worship the Lord your God, and serve only him.'”

Romans 10: 11-13 The scripture says, “No one who believes in him will be put to shame.” For there is no distinction between Jew and Greek; the same Lord is Lord of all and is generous to all who call on him. For “Everyone who calls on the name of the Lord shall be saved.

Continue reading Lenten Reflection from Rev. Lawton Higgs: Praxis

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99 Films Presents Gaining Ground: Tuesday, Feb. 16th, 7 PM

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On January 19, we screened “Holding Ground: The Rebirth of Dudley Street.” This is the followup of that award-winning documentary about community vision, struggle, and change in the Roxbury Neighborhood of Boston. We will continue the discussion about the development of one of the most successful community land trusts in the nation, and how the City of Birmingham can learn from Dudley Street.
Led by Susan Diane Mitchell, founder of Birmingham’s first ever community land trust, the Dynamite Hill-Smithfield Community Land Trust.

Magnolia BBQ and Fish will have a hot dog stand out front.

$5 suggested donation.

RSVP and more info on Facebook.

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For the Common Good: 1st Corinthians 12:1-11

We are currently without a lead pastor, but we are blessed to welcome numerous guest preachers each week. Our Beloved Jennifer Sanders preached the following sermon on Sunday, January 17th. 

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I spent some time on Friday following one of the heritage walks downtown in the Civil Rights district. If you’ve been downtown at all, you’ve probably passed and read some of those signs that mark significant events and places in Birmingham’s Civil Rights history. Though there are currently four separate march routes that spread across several blocks each, I’ve always read individual signs by happenstance, usually through my car window as I’m stopped at a red light.

I had never followed a whole path before. So Friday – on Dr. Martin Luther King Jr’s actual calendar birthday –  I decided to make the time to not only walk through Kelly Ingram Park, but also to trace the route that covers the Selective Shopping campaign, the economic resistance that led to peaceful protest and violent response.

Foot soldiers and firehoses. Pickets and police dogs. Even though we know the history – some of you lived through it – it never ceases to hold new lessons for us. It is a part of who we are and who we will become. It is a part of our context. Walking that whole path brings a vivid sense of our city’s history and of how that continues to shape our journey forward as we seek – or not – common ground and the common good.

This letter of Paul’s to the Corinthians is born of another specific context and it speaks into that context. It’s one of a series of letters – only 2 of which have been preserved – from Paul to a congregation that he had founded some years before. Much of the letter consists of his pastoral responses to their questions.

Read the full sermon on Jennifer’s blog…

For the Common Good sermon: 1 Corinthians 12: 1-11   

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99 Films Presents Holding Ground: Tuesday, Jan. 19, 7 pm

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We hope to see everyone after the New Year at Beloved for a screening of the documentary, “Holding Ground: The Rebirth of Dudley Street,” facilitated by Carol Judy from the Clearfork Valley in Tennessee. Carol is a Rural Development Leadership Network Fellow, and former resident and leader of the Woodland Land Trust in Tennessee, one of the oldest community land trusts in the country.

This award-winning documentary is about community vision, struggle, and change in the Roxbury Neighborhood of Boston, including the development of one of the most successful community land trusts in the nation.

RSVP on Facebook.

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