While deaths at the hands of police make headlines, the problem of implicit bias in policing and security for most Black Americans is experienced as a daily psychic burden.
Racial Justice
How Latino Catholics are grappling with their own history of racism
The United States is going through a national examination of conscience on the question of race, and the Latino community is no exception.
How Milwaukee-area Catholic leaders are responding to the Jacob Blake shooting and protests
Church leaders call for peace but also renewed efforts against racism during a week of protest and violence after a police shooting in Kenosha, Wis.
Emmett Till’s faithful mother is the saint we need in the fight for racial justice
Mamie Till Mobley understood something our sanitized pictures of Jesus hide: that the suffering of Jesus continued in the death of her son and is ongoing in the death of George Floyd.
Archbishop Gregory on today’s March on Washington: The church needs to do more for racial justice
“I don’t think we can take our foot off the pedal. We are doing a credible job; we need to do more.”
New Orleans renames street to honor longtime Xavier U. president
The New Orleans City Council voted unanimously Aug. 20 to rename Jefferson Davis Parkway in honor of Norman C. Francis, former president of Xavier University of Louisiana.
‘The Melting Pot’ is an outdated image of America. We need a new metaphor to define the nation.
What kind of people will we be, not only at the end of the Covid-19 storm but throughout the journey?
Why ‘feeling right’ on race is not—and has never been—enough
In 1862, Harriet Beecher Stowe made feeling right on race easy, righteous and comfortable, all at once. We face the same trap today.
Review: A book that will challenge your views about affirmative action
In his new book, Melvin Urofsky, an emeritus professor of history at Virginia Commonwealth University and the author of numerous books, details the critical issues around affirmative action in the United States.
Black and Latino Catholics agree: Our lives matter
The Black Lives Matter movement is an opportunity for Latino Catholics to express solidarity. “Tu lucha es mi lucha,” or “your struggle is my struggle,” write Adrienne Alexander and Michael N. Okińczyc-Cruz.
