Exhibition Opening-Make Good Trouble: Marching for Change
Make Good Trouble: Marching for Change exhibition highlights and features those artists and citizen protestors who took to the street to raise awareness about social injustices in the wake of George Floyd's death.
Short Kutz: Homecoming 2020- Virtual Program
Join us for this virtual celebration of HBCU homecomings and the memories, lessons, and adventures found at these "family" reunions. Nine storytellers will share with you -- LIVE -- unforgettable, curated, true-to-life narratives. If you're homesick for your HBCU homecoming, this show is the perfect antidote! To attend this virtual program, you only need to […]
Educator’s Webinar: Civil War and Reconstruction – Virtual Course (11/7;11/14, 11/21)
Examine the Civil War and Reconstruction through the lens of the African American experience with content lectures, a virtual tour and interactive instruction from An African American Journey Resource Guide. This course includes home assignments and implementing a curriculum lesson to obtain 1 MSDE credit hour. In partnership with the Maryland Center for History and Culture. […]
Stolen: Five Free Boys Kidnapped into Slavery and Their Astonishing Odyssey Home – Virtual Program
Join Dr. Richard Bell to discuss his new book, Stolen, a gripping and true story about five boys who were kidnapped in the North and smuggled into slavery in the Deep South—and their daring attempt to escape and bring their captors to justice, reminiscent of Twelve Years a Slave and Never Caught. Their ordeal—an odyssey […]
Social Justice Fabric Workshop for Youth (11/14 and 11/21) – Virtual Program
Express your activism through art by creating a fabric quilt block on a social justice issue important to our community. Hosted by the Social Justice Sewing Academy, youth participant’s quilt blocks will be sewn together into a social justice quilt. Quilt block templates will be provided by the Academy. Participants will need fabrics, craft glue […]
Baltimore Lives: A Discussion with John Mayden – Virtual Program
Award winning photographer John Clark Mayden has been documenting life in Baltimore ’s African American neighborhoods since the 1970s. His photographs capture the ordinary joys and sorrows, quiet moments, and daily realities of life: kids on their bikes and roller skates, old timers catching a breeze on their front stoops and busy people striding through […]
Who Belongs: Racial Profiling in the Synagogue
Join clinical psychologist Dr. Harriette Wimms and Chizuk Amuno Congregation Senior Rabbi Joshua Gruenberg as they explore the often fraught experiences of Jews of Color and what it means to be seen as “other” even in one’s own community. Click Here to Register. This is the second of three programs presented in partnership with the Jewish Museum […]
Free the Vote- ACLU Premier Screening- Virtual Program
Join the ACLU of Maryland and the Reginald F. Lewis Museum for a virtual premiere screening of Free the Vote, a new documentary by the ACLU of Maryland. The film shows how denying the right to vote of people who are incarcerated is rooted in a deeply racist system by focusing on the stories of […]
Educator Webinar: Freedom Bound Conversations Through Literature – Virtual Program
Explore the road to freedom during the antebellum period for African American runaways as portrayed in children’s literature with a panel discussion with children’s authors and illustrators Elizabeth Zunon, Jerdine Nolen and Carole Boston Weatherford. A lesson resource will be provided. In conjunction with Freedom Bound: Runaways of the Chesapeake. RSVP HERE Cost: Free
Book Talk: The Brother You Choose with Paul Coates, Eddie Conway and Susie Day
Join author Susie Day and former Black Panthers Paul Coates and Eddie Conway to discuss lives, politics, and their friendship that helped Eddie survive decades in prison. In 1971, Eddie Conway, Lieutenant of Security for the Baltimore chapter of the Black Panther Party, was convicted of murdering a police officer and sentenced to life plus […]