1. The decision of a Tennessee county school board to ban Maus from the classroom is not an isolated incident
— Judd Legum (@JuddLegum) January 27, 2022
It is part of a much broader effort to censor history and literature being packaged under euphemisms like "parents rights"
Follow along if interested pic.twitter.com/Ciidqperrz
This is a really powerful thread about Maus. What it is, what it’s about and the fundamental and intrinsic Jewishness of the narrative. And why you don’t replace it. https://t.co/HMfKKbxaWz
— Neil Gaiman (@neilhimself) January 28, 2022
Today is #HolocaustMemorialDay.
— The Martin Luther King, Jr. Center (@TheKingCenter) January 27, 2022
We remember the lives:
Six million Jews
Five million Roma, LGBTQ+, disabled and others murdered at the hands and hate of the Nazis
We remember the ideology:
White supremacy
Religious bigotry
Power centric
We commit to the work. pic.twitter.com/Vq5679fb2j
Today is Holocaust memorial day. The genocide of Jews, as well as mass killings of Roma and other minorities, during World War II is a brutal reminder of what hatred and prejudice can lead to. We must never let it happen again. We must never forget. pic.twitter.com/9dJK32cG7D
— Amnesty International (@amnesty) January 27, 2022
At 4 pm CET we will begin the live broadcast of the commemoration event of the 77th anniversary of the liberation of Auschwitz.
— Auschwitz Memorial (@AuschwitzMuseum) January 27, 2022
Watch LIVE at:
🔹@AuschwitzMuseum
🔹https://t.co/7yKQP9t7NJ
🔹YouTube: https://t.co/2SLFXuD5z1 pic.twitter.com/825WnbeOxX
In his inaugural address one year ago today, @POTUS committed to “press forward with speed and urgency, for we have much to do in this winter of peril and possibility.” In the year since, he and the @VP have made significant progress in the face of enormous challenges. pic.twitter.com/5YFbMnw3Pg
— Barack Obama (@BarackObama) January 20, 2022
Art with a Message
His words were true then. They are true now. #MLKDay
Listen to the entire speech MLK gave on campus below:Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. spoke to more than 5,000 people on April 27, 1965 on UCLA’s campus, roughly one month after the Selma-to-Montgomery voting rights marches took place. #MLKday https://t.co/vgvAWxqcb6
— UCLA (@UCLA) January 17, 2022
— W. Kamau Bell (@wkamaubell) January 17, 2022
That's it. That's the quote. pic.twitter.com/2VLTirT2Tm
In honor of Martin Luther King Jr. Day, celebrate artists that are using their artwork to present and encourage a hopeful, more equitable future: https://t.co/2PN3uL7bgY
— Saatchi Art (@SaatchiArt) January 17, 2022
[Banke Jemiyo]#contemporaryart #SaatchiArt #MLK #MLKDAY#ArtoftheDay #artgallery #art #emergingart pic.twitter.com/1raB8M5V2d
by Gregg Chadwick
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