How To Complement Your Outfit With Monet Fashion Accessories
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Accessories are the details that complete your look. They can add originality or individuality to your appearance. Learning to choose the right accessories for your clothes means making your image harmonious. Knowing how to accessorize your outfit is an important skill that can beautify your appearance and make your look more complete. The right accessories…
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Home of Claudia Jones memorialized in London
One of the former homes of the Harlem-bred radical intellectual Claudia Jones was recently honored with an English Heritage blue plaque.
The plaque was mounted on the façade of 6 Meadow Road in the Vauxhall district of London on October 5.
English Heritage blue plaques have been placed on more than 400 historic buildings and sites throughout England to mark locations where important events have taken place. The organization has noted that only 4.6% of their plaques in London commemorate places where Black or Asian people have made history.
The installation of the blue plaque in Vauxhall took place during Britain’s annual Black History Month celebrations. It was meant to commemorate the location where Jones, a mid-20th century journalist and community organizer, lived for nearly four years while in England.
It’s the place where, in 1958, she established the West Indian Gazette and Afro-Asian Caribbean News, the first major Black newspaper in Britain.
Vauxhall was also where Jones thought of establishing a Caribbean Carnival in London. After a series of incidents culminated in a race riot that saw working class British people attacking African and Caribbean immigrants, Jones thought to feature a celebration of Caribbean culture in the heart of London. “A people’s art is the genesis of their freedom,” she wrote as a slogan for her first Caribbean Carnival celebration, in January 1959. Jones’s carnivals had no direct relation to what later became known as Notting Hill Carnival (NHC), the activist group TAOBQ (The African Or Black Question) has pointed out, but were among the first to herald Caribbean culture in Britain—something that is now the norm at NHC.
“Culture––whether music, art, or dance––will always provide opportunity to open minds and drive change, and Claudia saw this better than anyone,” Afro British cultural historian and Blue Plaques Panel member Gus Casely-Hayford said in a press statement.
The Trinidad and Tobago-born, Harlem-reared Jones had been a prominent member of the Communist Party USA (CPUSA) and for years authored the Daily Worker newspaper’s “Half the World” column, where she wrote about African American and other working-class women’s issues.
Jones’s links to the CPUSA led to her being arrested several times. Government authorities questioned her loyalty to the United States and ultimately deported her to England in 1955 rather than to Trinidad, which was still a colony at the time.
Her work in England has led to her being acknowledged as one of the 100 Great Black Britons.
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New museum head troubled by human remains taken from graves
(GIN) – Sean M. Decatur, recently appointed to head the American Museum of Natural History, is well aware of the obstacles that could await him in his new job.
This is clear from an essay he wrote for the Chronicle of Higher Education titled “The Cost of Leading While Black.”
“If you are a Black person in America, you can measure with an egg timer how long it takes for an intense disagreement to lead to the invocation of racist tropes,” he wrote. “The dynamics of race in America are fractal: They can be observed at all scales, from the paths of power in Washington to the gravel paths of bucolic Gambier, Ohio.”
His current challenge will be to quickly move forward on the returning of skeletons of indigenous and enslaved people taken from their graves and the bodies of New Yorkers who died as recently as the 1940s.
The museum is facing questions about the legality and the ethics of its acquisitions.
“Figuring out exactly what we have here is something that is important to do moving forward,” Decatur said.
“Human remains collections were made possible by extreme imbalances of power,” Decatur noted in a letter sent to staff members this week. “Moreover, many researchers in the 19th and 20th centuries then used such collections to advance deeply flawed scientific agendas rooted in white supremacy—namely the identification of physical differences that could reinforce models of racial hierarchy.”
Currently, the museum has three people involved in the repatriation of remains, although Decatur said part of his initiative is to focus more resources in this area.
Decatur discussed the desecration of the cemetery for enslaved people in his letter to the staff. The cemetery most likely dated back to colonial times and was excavated during construction in the Upper Manhattan neighborhood of Inwood. A photo from that time displays the skeletons that had been pulled from the ground. Workers formed a pyramid with the skulls.
In an interview, Decatur called the treatment of the bodies, “disturbing.”
In his staff letter, the museum president said of the remains, “Identifying a restorative, respectful action in consultation with local communities must be part of our commitment.”
Recently, John Jay College professor Erin Thompson learned about the New York museum’s “medical collection” while conducting research into the ethical and legal questions that surround its holdings of remains. She was surprised to see the collection included New Yorkers who had died as recently as the 1940s.
Efforts to more fully research those remains were stymied by the museum, she said, which denied her access to its catalog.
Human remains currently on display in the museum range from skeletons to instruments and beads made from, or incorporating, human bones.
“None of the items on display,” Decatur said in his letter, “are so essential to the goals and narrative of the exhibition as to counterbalance the ethical dilemmas presented by the fact that human remains are in some instances exhibited alongside and on the same plane as objects.
“These are ancestors and are in some cases victims of violent tragedies or representatives of groups who were abused and exploited, and the act of public exhibition extends that exploitation.”
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Habitat NYC And Westchester Raises Money For Housing Justice With Launch Of Flagship ReStore
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Habitat for Humanity New York City and Westchester County Habitat NYC and Westchester, volunteers, and board members. As well as local community leaders gathered in Yonkers on Friday, October 13, 2023, for a ribbon-cutting ceremony celebrating the grand opening of the non-profit’s regional flagship ReStore retail location at 470 Nepperhan Avenue, Westchester, NY. Spanning 8,400…
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New York City limiting migrant families with children to 60-day shelter stays to ease strain on city
ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) — New York City Mayor Eric Adams announced Monday that he is limiting shelter stays for migrant families with children to 60 days, bidding to ease pressure on a city housing system overwhelmed by a large influx of asylum seekers over the past year.
The Democrat’s office said it will begin sending 60-day notices to migrant families who live in shelters, though they could reapply for housing if they are unable to find a new place to live. The city also will provide “intensified casework services” to help families secure housing, according to a news release.
It’s the mayor’s latest attempt to provide relief to the city’s shelter system and finances as it grapples with more than 120,000 international migrants who have come to New York, many without housing or the legal ability to work. More than 60,000 migrants currently live in city shelters, according to his office.
Adams has estimated the city will spend $12 billion over the next three years to handle the influx, setting up large-scale emergency shelters, renting out hotels and providing various government services for migrants.
The mayor last month limited adult migrants to just 30 days in city-run facilities amid overcrowding. Adams is also seeking to suspend a unique legal agreement that requires New York City to provide emergency housing to homeless people. No other major U.S. city has such a requirement.
“With over 64,100 asylum seekers still in the city’s care, and thousands more migrants arriving every week, expanding this policy to all asylum seekers in our care is the only way to help migrants take the next steps on their journeys,” Adams said in a statement.
Recently Adams took a four-day trip through Latin America, starting in Mexico, where he sought to discourage people from coming to New York by telling them the city’s shelter system is at capacity and that its resources are overwhelmed.
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