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April 6, 2011 - 10:52am
An Interview with activist Alina Verhofskaya
March 31, 2011 - 6:12pm
"One of the reasons why I like NIOS Week is that it reminds staff and students that it’s OK to actively participate in what’s going on around you, and that you should be supported for standing up against something that isn’t right." This week Gunn High School in Palo Alto, Calif. held its annual Not In Our School Week. Kristy Blackburn, English teacher and Not In Our School program coordinator, reflects on the first day of Gunn’s 2011 NIOS Week.
March 30, 2011 - 12:10pm
This guest blog post comes from a concerned member with Not In Our Town Princeton, a vibrant group in the NIOT community. In this opinion piece, the author addresses hate crimes and discrimination against the Muslim community in the U.S. The author finds hope in civil rights organizations, good Samaritans and interfaith movements. The tragedy of 9/11 struck all of us very hard but perhaps the community most affected by this tragic event in the history of our nation is the American Muslim community. While American Muslims grieved on 9/11, they also worked side by side with ground zero rescue workers and first responders. American Muslims also gathered supplies for the rescue workers at Ground Zero.
March 23, 2011 - 3:12pm
Community members in Oakland, CA are using digital media to give public testament to the richness and diversity of their neighborhood in a city often plagued with a negative and violent image in the media. “There’s wonderful things and there’s real people here with real stories and we’re giving people outside of East Oakland a fresh or new perspective and interaction with East Oakland residents,” said Anthony Propernick, the senior library assistant to the neighborhood’s new public library that houses a digital storytelling station. Not In Our Town—which also believes in the power of story and of individuals to change communities for the better—joined the public art project Our Oakland: Eastside Stories at the new 81st Avenue branch of the Oakland Public Library for a community-building celebration in February. Organizations and residents of East Oakland came together to share their stories and make connections.
March 21, 2011 - 11:54am
Interfaith residents of Elk Grove, Calif. gathered on March 11 for a prayer vigil to honor two elderly Sikh community members who were gunned down early this month during their routine walk through the neighborhood. One of  the victims in the shooting, 67-year-old Surinder Singh, suffered fatal wounds while his friend, 78-year-old Gurmej Atwal, remains in critical condition. East Stockton Boulevard, a busy Elk Grove road was temporarily closed to traffic as residents of different ethnicities and religions lit candles and listened as a series of speakers, including the grandson and granddaughters of Singh, spoke solemnly about the tragic loss of their family member. Many members of the community fear that the shootings were a hate-motivated crime and that the two might have been mistaken for people of Muslim faith. Just feet away from where the two were shot, Sikh and Muslim residents called for interfaith acceptance and respect. Not In Our Town features this video of the Elk Grove community standing up to religious intolerance.