LOS ANGELES UNITED METHODIST MUSEUM OF SOCIAL JUSTICE
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      • That Stubborn Resistance
      • Hope and Dignity: The Farmworker Movement
      • "Comfort Women" Then and Now: Who They Were and Why We Should Remember Them
      • Finding Sequins in the Rubble: Archives of Jotería Memories in Los Angeles
      • La Plaza: A Center of Injustice and Transformation
      • Ink Tributes
      • Deported Veterans
      • Caravanas del Diablo
      • Thai El Monte Garment Workers >
        • Quilting Project
      • New Black City
      • Impact on Innocence >
        • Lies by Deborah McDuff
      • One of Us: How We See It
      • Transportapueblos: The Resilientes
      • Visualizing the People's History
      • Goodwill: Its Founding and History in Southern California
      • Greyhound Diaries
      • One of Us
      • California Dream: A Community Response
      • In Memoriam: Los Angeles
      • Shattered Mural
      • Con Safos: Reflections of Life in the Barrio
      • African American Civil Rights Movement L.A. Exhibition
      • Exodus
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  • Tardeada 2022
  • Tardeada 2021
  • Tardeada 2020
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​​WELCOME TO THE MUSEUM OF SOCIAL JUSTICE!

​The Museum & Education Center are home to a series of diverse Public Programs and Education Initiatives. Revolving Exhibitions showcase the history of Los Angeles and social change from the perspective of the poor, minorities, and other marginalized groups.
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NOVEMBER 2017 BIRTHDAYS

11/2/2017

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Please join us in celebrating the birthdays of these notable figures and applaud them for their work in Social Justice.
*** The Museum of Social Justice would like to hear from you! If there is a notable figure who should be recognized in our Monthly Birthday posts, please feel free to email [email protected].***

Elizabeth Stanton (November 12, 1815 – October 26, 1902)
Elizabeth Cady Stanton was a social activist, women’s rights activist, and abolitionist. She was a leading figure in the women’s rights movement.  In 1848, Stanton wrote the Declaration of Sentiments, which was created to help secure equal rights for women. Other social issues she challenged included: women’s parental and custody rights, property rights, divorce, birth control, and supported the temperance movement. Stanton also authored and co-authored History of Woman Suffrage and the Woman’s Bible.
Shirley Graham Du Bois (November 11, 1897 – March 27, 1977)
Shirley Graham Du Bois was an American Award-winning author, playwright, composer, and African American activist. She was married to W.E.B. Du Bois, an American sociologist, historian, and civil rights activist. Du Bois was known for writing the first race opera in 1932, Tom Tom: An Epic of Music and the Negro, which expressed the Africans’ journey to the North American colonies through dance and music. The premier attracted 10,000 people and the second performance attracted 15,000 people. Du Bois won the Messner and the Anisfield-Wolf prizes for her work.
Bryan Stevenson (November 14, 1959)
​Bryan A Stevenson is an American lawyer, clinical professor at New York University School of Law, and a social justice activist who founded the Equal Justice Initiative (EJI). The EJI is a non-profit organization based in Montgomery, Alabama that provides legal representation to prisoners who may have been wrongly convicted of crimes or denied a fair trial.  Stevenson has gained acclamation for his work in challenging the bias against the poor and minorities. He has secured relief for dozens of condemned prisoners and developed community based reform litigation to aid in improving the administration of criminal justice. Stevenson has been a recipient of awards such as, Olof Palme Prize, Gruber Justice Prize, and Andrew Carnegie Medical for Excellence in fiction and Nonfiction.
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  • Home
  • About
    • Board of Directors
    • Museum & Education Partners
    • Get Involved
  • Board of Advisors
  • Exhibitions
    • Comrade Sisters: Women of the Black Panther Party
    • Future Exhibitions
    • Past Exhibitions >
      • That Stubborn Resistance
      • Hope and Dignity: The Farmworker Movement
      • "Comfort Women" Then and Now: Who They Were and Why We Should Remember Them
      • Finding Sequins in the Rubble: Archives of Jotería Memories in Los Angeles
      • La Plaza: A Center of Injustice and Transformation
      • Ink Tributes
      • Deported Veterans
      • Caravanas del Diablo
      • Thai El Monte Garment Workers >
        • Quilting Project
      • New Black City
      • Impact on Innocence >
        • Lies by Deborah McDuff
      • One of Us: How We See It
      • Transportapueblos: The Resilientes
      • Visualizing the People's History
      • Goodwill: Its Founding and History in Southern California
      • Greyhound Diaries
      • One of Us
      • California Dream: A Community Response
      • In Memoriam: Los Angeles
      • Shattered Mural
      • Con Safos: Reflections of Life in the Barrio
      • African American Civil Rights Movement L.A. Exhibition
      • Exodus
  • Support/Membership
  • Visit
  • Supporters
  • Educational Tools and Resources
  • Historical Archive
  • Allyship and Support
    • BLM Resources for Kids
  • Tardeada 2022
  • Tardeada 2021
  • Tardeada 2020
  • Contact
  • Link Page