Tag Archives: black incarceration
Now You See It, Now You Don’t
Now You See It, Now You Don’t Last night I watched Renique Allen being interviewed on C-Span about her book, It Was All a Dream: A New Generation Confronts the Broken Promises to Black Americans I was utterly riveted by … Continue reading
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Tagged American origins, American West, being black, Biblical covenant, biblical Israel, biblical Israel and its neighbors, biblical narratives, black culture in the South, black incarceration, C-Span interview, Chaim N. Saiman’s Halakhah: The Rabbinic Idea of Law, communal consensus, dating pool, defacing the divine image, defending the Shekinah, defense of the feminine, demoralized men, divine feminine, Divine Presence, eligible black men, eligible men, erotic color lines, erotic predicament, erotic problematic in minority communities, explaining the Exile, Idolatry, Jehudim, Jewish survival, Lakota princess, Lakota warrior, love after lockup, millennials, models for healthy relationships, murder, Native American culture, parental couple, portable laws, promised land, rabbinic Judaism, racial bottleneck, refusal to compromise, relationship training, Renique Allen’s It Was All a Dream: A New Generation Confronts the Broken Promises to Black Americans, residential segregation, reverse migration, segregation in the North, self-revelation, sexual immorality, shared history, Shekinah, sin as an explanation, single parent homes, social grouping, social segregation, strategic vulnerability, the American South, the divine image, the First Exile, the Jewish assignment in history, the Mayflower, the religion of Israel, the Sanhedrin, the Second Exile, unfair imprisonment, unfair sentencing, what the hell it’s home, white liberals, white radicals, woman’s place in Israel, woman’s place in Judaism
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