Reconstructing Hope: Black Religions in the Age of Black Lives Matter

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Reconstructing Hope: Black Religions in the Age of Black Lives Matter

Many people are searching for hope amid the Black Lives Matter struggle and the COVID-19 pandemic. Hope is the ability to lean into an unknown future with courage and creativity despite opposition and oppression. In these difficult days, where do we find hope to counteract despair and rebuild broken communities?

Black religious and ethical traditions—ranging from African American Christianity to African American Humanism—have been instruments for reconstructing hope. Are they trustworthy tools now? In this public conversation, which is a preview of the 2022 Folklife Festival program Creative Encounters: Living Religions in America, two respected scholars of religion—Anthony Pinn and Brad Braxton—will candidly examine the role of religious traditions in both frustrating and facilitating hope.

When: Monday, June 29, 2020, 12–12:45 p.m. ET

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. base is an online searchable knowledge base system; a curator and repository of research, litanies, articles, multimedia resources and more. Curating Theological Resources for Black Lives.

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