by Vijaya Nagarajan | Jun 17, 2020 | Poetry
Inequalities By Vijaya Nagarajan Inequalities fences boundaries borders walls prisons cages forced labor black, brown, white genders, races, classes, castes, ethnicities sexualities, ages, disabilities, religions countries, geographies, and languages...
by Vijaya Nagarajan | Jun 11, 2020 | Personal Essays
Literary fiction Sing, Unburied, Sing by Jesmyn Ward George Floyd, “‘Sing, Unburied, Sing’, The Magna Carta, and the Commonsby Vijaya NagarajanGeorge Floyd, a 46-year old Black man, was murdered by the white policeman, Derek Chauvin, in Minneapolis...
by Vijaya Nagarajan | Jun 3, 2020 | Uncategorized
It was the mirror that the civil rights legislation provided in the 1960s that revealed the deep bias against non-white immigration from Asia, Africa and South America, ever since the country’s founding. Did you ever wonder why it was only recently that there were...
by Vijaya Nagarajan | May 27, 2020 | Personal Essays
My dear 80-year old Jesuit colleague, Father Daniel Kendall, passed away in the middle of last night peacefully at 2:30 am. The Night of Memorial Day, Tuesday, May 26. He was in good health, swimming long laps most days for decades. His retirement had just been...
by Vijaya Nagarajan | May 20, 2020 | Personal Essays
A remarkable six part series has launched over the past few weeks on PBS––“Power Trip: The Story of Energy”––“Water”, “Food”, “Cities”, “Wealth”, “Transportation”, and “War”. This series explores the ways in which energy flows in and out of our use of water, food, and...
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