Articles

  • 2 weeks ago | 19thnews.org | Sabreen N. Dawud

    Inside their salons, they’ve reshaped what community work looks like, creating spaces for political organizing, economic independence and healing.

  • 1 month ago | thecurrentga.org | Alexis Wray |Eden Turner |Sabreen N. Dawud |Jake Shore

    This story was originally reported by Alexis Wray, Eden Turner and Sabreen Dawud of The 19th. Meet Alexis, Eden and Sabreen and read more of their reporting on gender, politics and policy. Sixty years ago, on March 7, Sheyann Webb-Christburg walked with 600 other activists in Selma, Alabama, to protest Black voter suppression.

  • 1 month ago | truthout.org | Alexis Wray |Eden Turner |Sabreen N. Dawud

    This story was originally reported by Alexis Wray, Eden Turner and Sabreen Dawud of The 19th. Meet Alexis, Eden and Sabreen and read more of their reporting on gender, politics and policy. Sixty years ago, on March 7, Sheyann Webb-Christburg walked with 600 other activists in Selma, Alabama, to protest Black voter suppression. As they reached the Edmund Pettus Bridge, just six blocks into their 54-mile march to the state capital of Montgomery, Webb-Christburg’s heart began to beat faster.

  • 1 month ago | 19thnews.org | Alexis Wray |Eden Turner |Sabreen N. Dawud

    Published Sixty years ago, on March 7, Sheyann Webb-Christburg walked with 600 other activists in Selma, Alabama, to protest Black voter suppression. As they reached the Edmund Pettus Bridge, just six blocks into their 54-mile march to the state capital of Montgomery, Webb-Christburg’s heart began to beat faster. She saw police lined up at the bridge’s entrance, wearing tear gas masks and holding billy clubs.

  • 1 month ago | yahoo.com | Alexis Wray |Eden Turner |Sabreen N. Dawud

    Sixty years ago, on March 7, Sheyann Webb-Christburg walked with 600 other activists in Selma, Alabama, to protest Black voter suppression. As they reached the Edmund Pettus Bridge, just six blocks into their 54-mile march to the state capital of Montgomery, Webb-Christburg’s heart began to beat faster. She saw police lined up at the bridge’s entrance, wearing tear gas masks and holding billy clubs. Watching the police with their horses and dogs in tow, Webb-Christburg took in the scene.

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