Rami Nashashibi is a champion for how art can make humans visible to each other. He brings a new energy to Islam’s core commitment to beauty and humanity — and to the power of stories to heal and electrify us across geography and generation, culture and faith. He founded the Inner-City Muslim Action Network on Chicago’s South Side, where he also lives with his family. “The arts have become the real factor for us in both humanizing each other’s stories, connecting our stories, and revealing to one another the possibilities of what a better world can look like,” he says.
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A social worker holds a group for teenagers at a school. They only half pay attention to him. Then something happens, and they pay attention to each other.
We’re pleased to offer Benjamin Gucciardi’s poem, and invite you to connect with Poetry Unbound throughout this season.
Over the course of six weeks, our team ventured into our rich archive, finding new constellations of tools and teachings along the way. Our summer series was a thrilling exploration of this wisdom from Pema Chödrön, which guides so much of our work: “When we pause, allow a gap, and…
Krista Tippett: I had a professor at Divinity School who always started his lectures with preliminary remarks, and sometimes the preliminary remarks took the entire time. I’m not going to do that, but I did make some notes. I do want to offer some preliminary remarks — some offerings…
Love requires a continued commitment to justice for all. Austin Channing Brown on the responsibility to carry our hope with a deep understanding of justice.
In a hyper-connected world, writer Sarah Smarsh says we lose sight of the power in physical spaces crafted for ritual and coming together.
The image of a small boy's body washed onto the beach awakened the world to the largest refugee crisis in decades. Omid Safi shares his heartbreak, reminding us that love and compassion must lead toward action and must reach across geographical boundaries and borders of faith.
What would it look like to quarrel with our country in a way the soul would affirm? A contemplation of patriotism turned inward, and the "fierce-love truth-telling" that will help us become the democratic community we aspire to be.
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