Riverlore by Joseph Via Flickr:
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Riverlore by Joseph Via Flickr:
Riverlore - 1865 mansion by Mike Fitzpatrick | Flickr)
Riverlore
Riverlore by Mike Fitzpatrick Via Flickr: Riverlore - This 1865 mansion,
This Book is one of my treasures. I found it in a free box on an Asheville street corner, the day before I drove down to New Orleans for the first time 4 years ago. It joins me on all journeys. The real life characters and phrasings are pure gold. ("Gumbo-YaYa" is a creole phrase that means everyone is loudly eagerly speaking at once) #gumboyaya #neworleans #riverlore #mississippiriver #louisiana #lore #legends #deepsouth https://www.instagram.com/p/Bs5v45Nh9O1/?utm_source=ig_tumblr_share&igshid=x23g762oixdy
Sometimes ... you are like looking for a blog to add to an e-mail that you are sending to County Commissioners to try and score a wall for a teen mural project on restorative justice and the school-to-prison cycle (because “pipeline” is a culturally violent term) ... and you don’t find said blog, but you find this gem that was published a month ago about work you did a few years back.
Laura Marcus Green and Tara Trudell were my partners in rhyme as we fitted a performance workshop series for Santa Fe ¡YouthWorks! My four week module was part of a much larger curriculum that the students were engaged in, however I was happy to integrated into the incredible work of the Museum of International Folk Art, the Gallery of Conscience, Santa Fe Youth Media Project, Warehouse 21 and ¡YouthWorks!. It is a powerful, collective impact approach that allows students to grow the muscles of partnership by practice. It’s more than just point students towards resources, it is “the doing” and the repeated “doing” that builds trust, new routines, new relationships, new practices, new behaviors and the new muscles of self and success.
I won’t try to rewrite their comprehensive blog of the program objectives and outcomes, you can check it out at Community Works Institute’s LA RiverLore Blog and at Medium.
“Powerful learning with social purpose connecting students to their local community.” - LA RiverLore
At the confluence of the Ohio and Mississippi Rivers sits Cairo, Illinois, a historic river town that the cruise lines no longer visit, at least in part because of complaints from passengers. Cairo today is nearly a ghost town, its broad Commercial Street almost completely razed. What few buildings remain are largely abandoned, and passengers disliked the eerie feel of the town built to house 20,000 people where only 3000 reside today. With such historic buildings as Riverlore mansion, built in 1865, the Customs House museum, or Fort Defiance, which is directly at the confluence, Cairo still has some points of interest, but the town is largely in shambles due to a eight-year shooting war between its white and Black communities from 1967-1975. Blacks refused to buy from Cairo businesses as a matter of principle. Whites preferred to shop where there weren't fires, bombings and snipings, so they also stayed away, and the end result was that nearly every restaurant and retail business closed. In recent years, there have been efforts to rejuvenate the town, and to heal race relations in Cairo, but the lack of jobs and the extreme poverty have thwarted efforts at any renaissance. The historic buildings on Commercial Street, neglected since the 1960's, have collapsed one by one. Furthermore, while the picketing, marching, boycotting and shooting stopped in the early 1970's, the mysterious fires did not, and buildings and houses continue to burn in Cairo, under circumstances that suggest that multiple arsonists may be at work. Cairo is a sad story, a cautionary tale to America of what happens when people are stubbornly racist and refuse to reconcile.