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Blog Posts 2023

Read Our Blog

Blog Posts 2023

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Once more, it is with tremendous pleasure that we announce our second awardee: Valarie Kaur, a renowned civil rights leader, lawyer, award-winning filmmaker, educator, innovator, and best-selling author of SEE NO STRANGER.

She leads the Revolutionary Love Project to reclaim love as a force for justice. Valarie burst into the American consciousness in the wake of the 2016 election when her Watch Night Service address went viral with 40 million views worldwide. Her question, "Is this the darkness of the tomb – or the darkness of the womb?" reframed the political moment and became a mantra for people fighting for change.

 

Twenty years ago, when Valarie was a college student, a family friend was murdered in a hate crime a few days after 9/11. He was a turbaned Sikh man she called "Uncle," killed by a man who called himself a patriot. Across the U.S., people of color were beaten, chased, shot, and stabbed in thousands of hate incidents that were barely reported in the media. Valarie took her camera and began a journey across America to tell her community's story and fight for racial justice. That journey continues today.

 

Valarie has won policy change on multiple fronts – hate crimes, racial profiling, immigration detention, solitary confinement, Internet freedom, and more. She founded Groundswell Movement, Faithful Internet, and the Yale Visual Law Project to inspire and equip advocates at the intersection of spirituality, storytelling, and justice. Valarie has been a regular TV commentator on MSNBC and a contributor to CNN, NPR, PBS, the Hill, Huffington Post, and the Washington Post. Valarie earned degrees at Stanford University, Harvard Divinity School, and Yale Law School.

 

Valarie's vision of "Revolutionary Love" is deeply rooted in her Sikh faith. She grew up on the farmlands of California, where her family has lived as Punjabi Sikh farmers for more than a century. As a child, whenever she felt lost, her grandfather would give her Sikh wisdom through song and point to the path of the sant-sipahi, sage-warrior. The sage loves; the warrior fights — it's a path of revolutionary love.

Join us at the Compassion Banquet, on Wednesday, August 16, at 5 pm at McCormick Place in Chicago, IL. Learn more here We promise a wonderfully inspiring evening and would love to meet you there in person!


 

With warm regards,

Lynn 

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