I didn’t know what to expect when my daughters decided last summer to give away sanitary pads and tampons to girls in need.
I didn’t know what to expect when my daughters decided last summer to give away sanitary pads and tampons to girls in need.
When they looked over the steel-arched crest of the Edmund Pettus Bridge in 1965, the voting rights activists knew there would be trouble.
Kinsey Akers had to take the PSAT but was determined to make her voice heard at a public meeting on school safety that same day.
Andre and his friend were taking turns on a cell phone, playing a video game called – about staying alive on a zombie-infested planet – when a real-life gunshot rang out.
When they were children, Herman Parker and his three sisters went to their grandparents’ house every election day.
Jonathan sleeps under a bridge at night or on a friend’s porch. During the day, he holds up a “homeless” sign in the grassy area near a highway exit and asks for money.
At just 5 years old, C.C. was suspended from school for destroying property and disobeying her teachers.
The first African American elected mayor of Montgomery, Alabama – a city known as both the “Cradle of the Confederacy” and the “Birthplace of the Civil Rights Movement” – urged those who gathered today to celebrate the 30th anniversary of the Civil Rights Memorial to ask themselves how they can make an impact on the lives of others.
Carolyn Wells Gee was in bed watching TV with her younger sister when she heard the shot that killed Medgar Evers.
Now, more than ever, we must work together to protect the values that ensure a fair and inclusive future for all.