Simoa Barros writes on a lesser-known animated flick from the late Michael Sporn that tells of a young Black girl who navigates her world in living color.
Sociologist Tia Noelle Pratt's new book, Black and Catholic: Racism, Identity, and Religion, is "an unapologetic statement in scholarly form that we, Black Catholics, are here and we matter," writes Rana Irby.
"For many Black Catholics, the issue is not whether the Church moved to combat racial harm," writes Efran Menny. "But rather if the response was sufficient to meet the powerful wave of forces so adamant on preserving the status quo, keeping Black people out of mobility and access to opportunity."
Election night results are in, and a pair of prominent races stand as microcosms of a youth-fueled Democratic wave that swept through the nation in an off-year temperature test amid the second Trump administration.
Charlie Kirk didn't deserve to be shot, but we shouldn't make him into a martyr or an example of Christian compassion and discourse. But that's what Bishop Robert Barron has tried to do, writes Tulio Huggins.
After conservative backlash, the U.S. Conference of Catholic Bishops has pulled from the internet an essay by an African-American bishop on diversity, equity, and inclusion.
Bishop Robert Barron praised the late Charlie Kirk after Kirk's shooting death Sept. 10. Barron spoke glowingly of the controversial activist despite Kirk's various political positions that conflict with Catholic teaching.