Media Search:



Black Lives Matter mural in Hartford unveiled following hateful vandalism – NBC Connecticut

Nows your chance to get a look at the refreshed Black Lives Matter mural in Hartford.

Artists unveiled it on Sunday during the citys Juneteenth celebration.

And it comes a week after hateful symbols were drawn on it leading to local and state outrage.

At a festive Juneteenth celebration in Hartford, people danced, learned about history and took in the just finished Black Lives Matter mural on Trinity Street.

Its beautiful. Look at the artistry. This is gorgeous, said Kate Cullen of Hartford.

Lashawn Robinson-Nuhu painted the B in Black.

From my letter I want people to take away art, culture, family and religion, said Robinson-Nuhu.

There are 16 letters with different designs, with an overall message.

I want them to know Hartford is a diverse community. We accept everyone, said Janice Castle, Hartford Director of Community Engagement.

This unveiling comes one week after hateful symbols were found on the mural.

Hartford Police say surveillance video captured the suspect, Scott Franklin, who is accused of drawing a Swastika and white supremacy message.

Its really unfortunate someone would see something so beautiful and want to deface it. However this is how Hartford celebrates our diversity. This is how we want to celebrate Juneteenth by reflecting on its history and meaning and gathering together as a community, said Karen Taylor, Hartford Director of Equity & Opportunity.

The graffiti was quickly painted over with a heart.

It appeared on the E in Lives which was designed by Latoya Delaire.

It just stands for rising together as a community and love, said Delaire.

Part of the takeaway that were all better together.

See more here:
Black Lives Matter mural in Hartford unveiled following hateful vandalism - NBC Connecticut

Ukraine Confirms Another Small Gain in the South – The New York Times

The caskets of Bohdan Didukh and Oleh Didukh, Ukrainian soldiers who shared a last name but were unrelated, are carried out of Saints Peter and Paul Garrison Church for their joint funeral on Monday.Credit...Brendan Hoffman for The New York Times

LVIV, Ukraine As the bodies of fallen soldiers steadily fill up a hillside at a military cemetery in the western Ukrainian city of Lviv, the old unmarked graves of those killed in past wars are being exhumed to make way for a seemingly endless stream of dead since Russias invasion of Ukraine.

On Monday afternoon, half a dozen gravediggers took a break in the shade, waiting for the latest coffin they would inter at the Lychakiv Cemetery. Smoking cigarettes and shielding themselves from the sun, they lamented the devastation that Russia had wrought. They said they were bracing for more deaths as fighting grows more intense during Ukraines counteroffensive.

On a sloping hillside, two men who died hundreds of miles apart were buried next to each other. Bohdan Didukh, 34, was killed by a mine last week on the front lines of the Zaporizhzhia region of southern Ukraine, where the first stages of Ukraines counteroffensive have begun. Three days later, Oleh Didukh, 52, died of a heart attack while serving in an air defense unit in the relative safety of the countrys west.

On Monday, they were honored side by side in a joint funeral in Lviv. Both of their families were overcome with grief as the soil shoveled on top of the two coffins landed with a succession of thuds. The men, who shared the same last name but never knew each other in life, were united in death in the service of their country.

One of the hard realities of Russias war in Ukraine is that even in a city far from active fighting, such as Lviv, soldiers killed on the front lines over the course of the 15-month-long conflict are returned to their hometowns, sometimes in groups, and laid to rest at the same time. It is seen as an efficient way to get through so many funerals when the dead keep coming.

At the funeral service for the two men in a Greek Catholic church in central Lviv, incense filling the air, the priest said that he had assumed the pair were father and son because of their names and ages. Though their families were not related, they were joined by their pain, he said.

Funerals for fallen soldiers have taken on a grim routine in Lviv. After the church ceremony, the coffins were loaded into vans and driven to the central square where a single trumpeter played. Then the cortege made its way to the graveyard.

Along the route to the cemetery, residents paused to pay their respects. A young girl stood next to her father, a small brown shopping bag in her hand, staring straight ahead as the coffins passed by. Some bystanders fell to their knees.

At the cemetery, Olena Didukh, the wife of Bohdan Didukh, fainted momentarily, overwhelmed by grief and the afternoon sun. Her sister steadied her, wrapping her arm around her back.

Kateryna Havrylenko, 50, who works for the city maintaining the graves, loaded soil onto a wheelbarrow. There are funerals here nearly every day, she said.

With the counteroffensive, many young men and women will be killed, she said. Words cannot express how difficult it is. Very, very difficult. Even though they are strangers, they are someones children, just like I have a child.

At the top of the hillside, city officials have begun exhuming the unmarked graves of soldiers who were buried as long ago as during World War I, young men who died at the start of the last century making way for those who have fallen in this war.

At the start of the war with Russia last year, there was just a small cluster of freshly dug graves on a hillside in one part of the cemetery. Now, nearly 500 soldiers have been buried here in plots filling half the hillside, she said, and more will come.

It is just so hard to think last summer, there were so few. And now there are so many. With a faraway look, she added: And until the war ends, how many more will there be?

Daria Mitiuk contributed reporting.

Read the rest here:
Ukraine Confirms Another Small Gain in the South - The New York Times

Support for the Black Lives Matter Movement Has Dropped Considerably From Its Peak in 2020 – Pew Research Center

A Black Lives Matter mural painted on Fulton Street in Brooklyn, New York City, in June 2020. (John Lamparski/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images)

Pew Research Center conducted this study to better understand Americans views of the Black Lives Matter movement, videos of police violence against Black people and the treatment of Black people in the United States 10 years after the #BlackLivesMatter hashtag first appeared on Twitter.

This analysis is based on a survey of 5,073 U.S. adults conducted April 10-16, 2023. Everyone who took part is a member of the Centers American Trends Panel (ATP), an online survey panel that is recruited through national, random sampling of residential addresses. Address-based sampling ensures that nearly all U.S. adults have a chance of selection. The survey is weighted to be representative of the U.S. adult population by gender, race, ethnicity, partisan affiliation, education and other categories. Read more about the ATPs methodology. Read more about the questions used for this report and the reports methodology.

References to White, Black and Asian adults include those who are not Hispanic and identify as only one race. Hispanics are of any race.

All references to party affiliation include those who lean toward that party. Republicans include those who identify as Republicans and independents who say they lean toward the Republican Party. Democrats include those who identify as Democrats and independents who say they lean toward the Democratic Party.

Ten years after the #BlackLivesMatter hashtag first appeared on Twitter, about half of U.S. adults (51%) say they support the Black Lives Matter movement, according to a new Pew Research Center survey. Three years ago, following the murder of George Floyd, two-thirds expressed support for the movement.

In assessing the impact of the Black Lives Matter movement, 32% say its been highly effective at bringing attention to racism against Black people. Smaller shares say the same about increasing police accountability (14%), improving the lives of Black people (8%) and improving race relations (7%). Overall, 31% of Americans say they understand the goals of the Black Lives Matter movement extremely or very well.

Views of the Black Lives Matter movement vary by:

The nationally representative survey of 5,073 U.S. adults was conducted April 10-16, 2023, using the CentersAmerican Trends Panel.

Additional key findings from the survey:

Like views of the Black Lives Matter movement, attitudes about videos of police violence against Black people being widely shared and the treatment of Black people in the U.S. often vary by race, ethnicity and partisanship.

The rest is here:
Support for the Black Lives Matter Movement Has Dropped Considerably From Its Peak in 2020 - Pew Research Center

Ukraine war: ‘Biggest’ offensive blow awaits Russia, night attacks, Navalny anti-war campaign – Euronews

All the latest developments from the war in Ukraine.

"Massive" Russian attacks targeted Kyiv and other Ukrainian cities of Lviv and Zaporizhia overnight from Monday to Tuesday, according to authorities.

Explosive drones attacked Ukraine's capital in waves from multiple directions, wrote the city's military administration on Telegram, adding the alert had lasted more than three hours.

In the western city of Lviv, "critical infrastructure" was hit by drones, said the head of the regional administration, Maksym Kozytskyi.

Meanwhile, authorities in Zaporizhia said the city had been subjected to a "massive attack" aimed at civilian objectives, including residential suburbs.

The Ukrainian General Staff later claimed the country's air defences shot down 28 out of 30 drones launched by Russian forces overnight.

No casualties were immediately reported.

Navalny urges anti-war campaign

Alexei Navalny urged his supporters on Monday to begin a broad campaign against Moscow's actions in Ukraine.

The imprisoned Russian opposition leader made the remarks as he went on trial on new charges of extremism that could keep him behind bars for decades.

Navalny said the anti-war effort must reach out to millions and explain the disastrous impact of the fighting and combat Putin's lies and the Kremlin's hypocrisy.

He argued that despite a relentless crackdown on dissent, such a campaign could be efficiently conducted on messaging apps outside the authorities' control.

No one but us could enter this fight for our citizens' hearts and minds, so we need to do it and win, Navalny said.

Soon after it started, the judge closed the trial despite his demand to keep it open.

In a statement posted on social media by his allies, Navalny declared the decision to close the trial was a sign of fear by President Vladimir Putin.

Navalny, who exposed official corruption and organised major anti-Kremlin protests, was arrested in January 2021 upon returning to Moscow after recovering from nerve agent poisoning in Germany.

'Biggest' counteroffensive blow awaits Russia, says Ukraine

Ukrainian Deputy Defence Minister Hanna Maliar said the "biggest blow" in Kyiv's military campaign is yet to come, but admitted the operation is difficult, as Russia mounts stiff resistance.

"The ongoing operation has several objectives, and the military is fulfilling these tasks," Maliar wrote on Telegram. "They are moving as they should have been moving. And the biggest blow is yet to come."

After months of acquiring Western weaponry, training and preparations, Ukraine began the first stage of its counteroffensive two weeks ago to reclaim the nearly fifth of its land now occupied by Russia.

"The enemy will not easily give up their positions, and we must prepare ourselves for a tough duel," Maliar said. "In fact, that is what is happening right now,"

The Ukrainian military, which had maintained strict silence about the campaign, has claimed small victories, claiming on Monday it had liberated several small settlements.

Russian President Vladimir Putin said late last week the Ukrainian counteroffensive did not have any meaningful success.

Officials and some Russian military bloggers say Kyiv has made small gains at the expense of huge troop and equipment losses.

Euronews cannot verify these claims.

Continue reading here:
Ukraine war: 'Biggest' offensive blow awaits Russia, night attacks, Navalny anti-war campaign - Euronews

Mayor Bowser Invites Residents to Commemorate Juneteenth 2023 … – Executive Office of the Mayor

(Washington, DC) On Monday, June 19, Mayor Muriel Bowser, the Office of Cable Television, Film, Music and Entertainment, the Department of Parks and Recreation, the Mayors Office of African American Affairs, and the DowntownDC Business Investment District (DowntownDC BID) will host events for residents to commemorate Juneteenth. Juneteenth is a national holiday commemorating the date in 1865 when, more than two years after President Lincoln issued the Emancipation Proclamation, Union Troops arrived in Galveston Bay, Texas and announced that all enslaved people were freed.

Juneteenth is a day we honor all those who struggled to ensure our freedoms, said Mayor Bowser. In DC, we not only celebrate our progress, we also keep fighting for full access to American democracy.

Residents are invited to commemorate the holiday with family, friends, and community at the following events taking place on Juneteenth:

Starting at 9 am, the District will host FITDCs first-ever Juneteenth Health and Wellness Fair, in partnership with AETNA, at Franklin Park. Like all FITDC events, the Juneteenth Health and Wellness Fair is free to attend. Residents from across the District can enjoy an active morning of fitness programming with locally renowned FITDC instructors leading yoga and cardio dance sessions, as well as a health-conscious outdoor festival featuring a live DJ, food trucks, mini massages, group meditation sessions, astrology classes, nutrition sessions, aura photography, and a variety of vendors representing Black-owned businesses. To register for FITDCs Juneteenth Health and Wellness Fair, visit HERE.

WHERE:

Franklin Park (1332 Eye Street NW)

Starting at 12 pm., the Juneteenth fanfare will continue on Black Lives Matter Plaza. The free activation will feature musical performances from Grammy nominated Go-Go band EU featuring Sugar Bear, Grammy nominated and ten-time Stellar-Award winner Anthony Brown, the Earth, Wind & Fire Tribute Band, The Image Band, along with other local musical performances. Quicksilver and DJ Sauce God will also go spin-to-win in a Battle of the DJs. Residents can also enjoy outdoor games, contests with prizes, a kid zone with activities for youth, live muralists, dancing, and more. The activation will also include a special School Daze 35th anniversary segment to recreate moments of the 1988 film by Spike Lee. HBCU students and alumni, along with sorority and fraternity members of the Divine Nine, will participate in the activation. To RSVP for the activation, email [emailprotected].

WHERE:

Black Lives Matter Plaza (800 16th Street NW)

In addition to the two District-sponsored events downtown, Dont Mute DC will be hosting a Conversation and Crank Juneteenth panel at the newly opened Sycamore & Oak retail village on the St. Elizabeths East campus in Ward 8 at 2pm.

On June 19, from sunset to sunrise, the District will light up the Frederick Douglass Memorial Bridge with red, yellow, black, and green colors.

Social Media: Mayor Bowser Twitter:@MayorBowser Mayor Bowser Instagram:@Mayor_Bowser Mayor Bowser Facebook:facebook.com/MayorMurielBowser Mayor Bowser YouTube:https://www.bit.ly/eomvideos

Read the original here:
Mayor Bowser Invites Residents to Commemorate Juneteenth 2023 ... - Executive Office of the Mayor