The 1619 Project
New York Times Magazine reporter Nikole Hannah-Jones recently appeared on The Daily Show to explain how “The 1619 Project” aims to show a more accurate history of America. You can view the segment below.
New York Times Magazine reporter Nikole Hannah-Jones recently appeared on The Daily Show to explain how “The 1619 Project” aims to show a more accurate history of America. You can view the segment below.
On Saturday, February 1, 2020 the Southern Delaware Alliance for Racial Justice partnered with Camp Rehoboth to organize a bus trip for over 50 joyful seekers to The National Museum of African American History and on the National Mall in Washington, D.C. The museum is the nation’s largest and most comprehensive cultural destination devoted exclusively to […]
The Cape Gazette January 28, 2020 Dr. Marlene A Saunders I want to share with you what I learned by participating in seven Dialogue to Action meetings that took place Sept. 25 to Oct. 30, and Nov. 16 in Georgetown and Lewes. The sessions focused on understanding racism (primarily anti-Black) and inequality, and identifying strategies […]
During the January 2020 Town Hall meeting of the Southern Delaware Alliance for Racial Justice, Sandy Spence and Nancy Powell presented an update of the Delaware General Assembly. The presentation focused on the accomplishments of the General Assembly over the past year, upcoming items, and the importance of the census. To view the presentation on […]
I am writing to you on behalf of the Southern Delaware Alliance for Racial Justice, to condemn the anti-Semitic remarks made by Nelly Jordan, vice chair of the Sussex County Republican Committee. As you may know, SDARJ is a nonpartisan organization, and, as such, we do not write this condemnation against a party, but against […]
The Southern Delaware Alliance for Racial Justice (SDARJ) hosted Delaware historian and lecturer Sylvester Woolford at the October Town Hall Meeting. Woolford’s presentation “The Journey from Shirley Bulah to Rudy Bridges” traced the history of the “colored schools” that Pierre DuPont built when the state of Delaware did not provide education for black children. Between 1920 and 1930 DuPont built 85 schools, called the “Great Experiment,” intending to shrink the education gap between blacks and […]