Tell Us What You Think
We welcome your feedback about our Pauli Murray Project events and initiatives. We are interested in your experiences, comments, questions, and concerns. Please Tell Us What You Think.
We welcome your feedback about our Pauli Murray Project events and initiatives. We are interested in your experiences, comments, questions, and concerns. Please Tell Us What You Think.
The3 United States has made great stides but we still have a ways to go. Jim Borbely
Is there a possible way to have these programs on DVD so I can view?
Thanks for your kind comment at the Jesus in Love Blog letting me know that voters approved “Saint Pauli” yesterday for inclusion in the Episcopal book of saints. I’m glad you liked my profile of her. Please share it with others who might be interested
I found a lot of valuable info here at http://www.paulimurrayproject.org while I was researching my article, including your comments here affirming Pauli’s lesbian identity. I was a little disappointed that her queer side does not seem to be mentioned anywhere on the official site contents, though. Maybe I missed it.
I was excited to see the murals and other portraits of Pauli Murray on your website. The Jesus in Love Blog emphasizes LGBT spirituality and the arts, so I try to run artist’s portraits of saints with their profiles whenever possible. I hope you can help me find a suitable painting of Pauli Murray to share on my blog for her first “saint day” next July 1.
P.S. Readers can find my profile at this link:
Pauli Murray: Episcopal church votes on queer saint / activist for civil rights and gender equality
http://jesusinlove.blogspot.com/2012/07/pauli-murray-episcopal-church-votes-on.html
My book, I Walked the Sloping Hills, contains a vignette on “Lyon Park School” in which I speak fondly of my fourth grade teacher at Lyon Park School, Miss Pauline F. Dame. A full paragraph is given to my delight in learning fifteen after my experience with Miss Dame, when I learned that “her niece was Pauli Murray, celebrated writer, lawyer, and civil-rights activist, may be best known for her book, “Proud ShoesL The Story of an American Family”………and that the book was dedicated to Caroline, Edmund, Marie, and the memory of Pauline Fitzgerald Dame….Parents were fond of her, perhaps because of her matronly demeanor and her demonstrably keen interest in their children.” This is an excerpt. I am willing to share and do more if the Project staff is interested. Walter M Brown
Thanks for the dialogue that was started yesterday. I was happy to be uncomfortable – I agree that it’s a good first step for all. I had to leave early, so I’m very interested to hear what happened after groups reported out using haiku. I’d also love to know if there are any plans to keep this momentum going.
Thanks so much,
Amy