Category: Main

  • Embracing What’s Natural

    Embracing What’s Natural

    The natural hair movement was created to encourage women with African ancestry to celebrate their kinky, curly, hair texture. For most, being natural has involved unlearning the deep-rooted beauty standard that straight hair equates to “good hair.” From a very young age, many black youth are forced to get their hair chemically straightened in order…

  • Volunteers help with market renovation, strengthening local economy

    Volunteers help with market renovation, strengthening local economy

    On a hot and sunny day, volunteers gather to help renovate the locally-owned Center City Market. Owner Omar Hussein talks about the specialized foods he sells, serving his community’s needs, creating food equity, health and a gathering place for young and old.

  • Mental Health: Opening Dialogue in the African Community

    Mental Health: Opening Dialogue in the African Community

    Bantu refugees have endured continuous marginalization in Somalia since their arrival as slaves from Bantu-speaking tribes in the 19th century. Even though they lived in Somalia for almost two centuries, the Bantu were still viewed and treated as foreigners and outsiders.   The persecution of the Somali Bantu during the Civil War in the 1990’s…

  • California Is Cracking Down on Legal Scams Targeting Immigrants

    California Is Cracking Down on Legal Scams Targeting Immigrants

    The State Bar of California has been working more aggressively to investigate and prevent legal scams that target immigrants desperate to avoid deportation. Its efforts have come at a time in which the federal government, under the Trump administration, has ratcheted up its immigration enforcement activities and rhetoric.

  • Under the Travel Ban, a Qualcomm Engineer Has Struggled to Bring His Sick Father to the U.S.

    Under the Travel Ban, a Qualcomm Engineer Has Struggled to Bring His Sick Father to the U.S.

    Sawyer Mirage, an engineer at Qualcomm, was able to successfully bring his mother from Iran to the United States. But his father’s visa has been held up in limbo, leaving the 75-year-old man alone in Iran with no one to care for him.