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âGive Them Their Flowersâ is a local exhibit paying homage to Miami's Black queer history and community. Loni Johnson is one of the participating artists. Her work focuses on honoring the people it was too late to honor in life, inviting us to remember and show love. She joined WLRN's Carlos FrĂas.
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âGive Them Their Flowers,â a new exhibition at the Little Haiti Cultural Center Art Gallery, displays and celebrates Miamiâs under-documented Black LGBTQ community at a time when Floridaâs government has become increasingly hostile toward Black and LGBTQ representation.
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The documentary, Crossing Overtown, explores the community's history as foundational not just to the city of Miami but also to the Civil Rights Movement.
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By Nadege GreenThe taking of Black-owned land is a common story throughout the history of the United States. In Miami, one community that was displacedâŚ
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Meek, the grandchild of a slave and a sharecropper's daughter who became one of the first Black Floridians elected to Congress since Reconstruction, died Sunday. She was 95.
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WLRN visited a Chevron gas station in Miami's Liberty City neighborhood on Northwest 54th Street to hear why people still feel uneasy about getting vaccinated against COVID-19 and why others are certain they'll choose to get vaccinated.
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The housing market in South Florida is red hot despite the pandemic. Plus, an Instagram account exploring the history of Black Miami-Dade County. And jazz singer Nicole Henry in our series Live from the 305.
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The housing market in South Florida is red hot despite the pandemic. Plus, an Instagram account exploring the history of Black Miami-Dade County. And jazz singer Nicole Henry in our series Live from the 305.
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The taking of black-owned land is a common story throughout the history of the United States. In Miami, one community that was displaced with littleâŚ
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While most of South Florida was getting ready for the Super Bowl in Miami Gardens, about 20 people gathered at Margaret Pace Park in Miami, 14 milesâŚ
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Homes in black neighborhoods in Miami, Fort Lauderdale and West Palm Beach are being undervalued, according to a study released last month by theâŚ
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Raimundo Atesiano wanted to reduce his town's crime statistics, so he ordered officers to arrest innocent people for a slew of unsolved burglaries. "I made some very, very bad decisions," he said.