Laura Kebede-Twumasi
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One hundred years ago on May 8, Tom Lee pulled 32 victims of a capsized boat out of the Mississippi River, becoming a hero whose deed would also serve up lessons on race.
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One of the city's first Black neighborhood's is looking forward forward to a new heyday. Residents and community leaders say housing and history are both abundant.
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In this episode of Civil Wrongs, Laura Kebede-Twumasi talks with wellness coach Dwania Kyles. In 1961, she was among 13 students to integrate Memphis schools.
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Personal wellness coach Dwania Kyles, among the first students to integrate Memphis schools, says the healing of internalized racial trauma begins with getting to the root of it.
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Laura Kebede-Twumasi talks with artist Ephraim Urevbu about his "Naked Truth Project."
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Ephraim Urevbu's art project combines art and technology to reveal the "Naked Truth" about Black History
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Meditation, discussions and confronting the past help members of the Weakley County Reconciliation Project move toward better racial understanding.
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In this half-hour special, residents of a small town in the Arkansas Delta grapple with a massacre that occurred there more than a century ago. Healing, they say, is ongoing.
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Residents of a small town in the Arkansas Delta say a massacre that took place there over a century ago is still healing from those wounds.
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A century ago, a white mob attacked a small town in the Arkansas Delta. This two-part series examines the roots of the attack and why residents say it's time to give history its due.