Richmond, VA: The City That Dares to Talk
This issue looks at Race Relations. In the Lead article the residents of Richmond Virginia are teaching the world how to talk honestly about race, reconciliation and responsibility and Guest Jim Wallis asks why America is divided along racial lines. In one Feature William Smook describes how the people of Stutterheim, South Africa, have transformed their district and in another how investment in the regeneration of Nagaland enables young business people.
THERE ARE 7 ARTICLES IN THIS ISSUE
The spiritual discipline and practical caring of Irish nun and social worker, Sister Stanislaus Kennedy
The scenes, televised globally, were ugly - rioting, looting, young African American men hauled to jail.
In the dying days of the apartheid era, the inhabitants of Stutterheim, South Africa, took their future into their own hands.
The aim of Entrepreneurs Associates (EA) is to 'kick-start a process of social change through entrepreneurship'.
Rev W. Douglas Tanner set up an institute to inject faith values into the US House of Representatives.
Race and Repentance (En)
More than 30 years after the death of Martin Luther King Jr, America is still divided along racial lines. Why?
Richmond, Virginia, the former capital of the southern states, which seceded at the time of the American Civil War, has a cheque