Loading...
Loading...
Click here if you don’t see subscription options
iStock

Gwen Ifill famously coined the expression “missing white woman syndrome” to describe our national obsession with a small subset of missing persons—largely white and female—to the exclusion of many other victims, especially persons of color.

This week on “The Gloria Purvis Podcast,” Gloria talks to Natalie Wilson, the co-founder of The Black and Missing Foundation, Inc., a Maryland-based nonprofit dedicated to searching for missing people of color when police and the media fall short. Their work is also the subject of the award-winning four-part HBO documentary series, “Black and Missing,” produced by Geeta Gandbhir and Soledad O’Brien.

For Catholics, this should be a pro-life issue, and one that we examine seriously. Forty percent of the about 600,000 people who went missing in 2019 were people of color—most of them Black. And it takes on average four times longer to resolve the cases of Black people.

Gloria and Natalie also discuss how the Black Lives Matter movement encompasses more than police violence; it extends to the issue of police neglect to investigate cases of Black persons gone missing.

Lastly, if you’ve been enjoying the Gloria Purvis Podcast please consider sharing some feedback in this brief Listener Survey!

Links:

The Black and Missing Foundation

The latest from america

At a Mass for the Jubilee of Youth outside Rome, Pope Leo exhorted over a million young people to be "seeds of hope" and a "sign that a different world is possible."
Gerard O’ConnellAugust 03, 2025
Perhaps it is the hard-won wisdom that comes with age, but the Catholic rituals and practices I once scorned are the same rituals and practices that now usher me into God's presence, time and time again.
Maribeth BoeltsAugust 01, 2025
"Only through patient and inclusive dialogue" can "a just and lasting conflict resolution can be achieved" in the long-running conflict between Israelis and Palestinians, said the Holy See's permanent observer to the United Nations.
This is the movie poster for “The Bad Guys” (CNS photo/DreamWorks Pictures)
The ”Bad Guys” films ask, how do we determine who the “bad guys” are? And if you’re marked as “bad” from the start, can you ever make good?
John DoughertyAugust 01, 2025