ART INSPIRING CHANGE — MORE JUSTICE — STRONGER ALLIANCES

Published Weekly October 30-November 5

"To be an artist, means never to avert one's eyes." Akira Kurosawa “This is precisely the time when artists go to work. Toni Morrison

"It is difficult to get the news from poems, yet men die miserably every day for lack of what is found there." ~ William Carlos Williams

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"It is difficult to get the news from poems, yet men die miserably every day for lack of what is found there." ~ William Carlos Williams 〰️

Cheryl Caesar is an ex- expatriate, having lived in Paris, Tuscany and Sligo (Republic of Ireland) for 25 years. She earned her doctorate in comparative literature at the Sorbonne, and now teaches writing at Michigan State University. Her chapbook Flatman: Poems of Protest in the Trump Era is available from Amazon, although she hopes it will soon be of historical interest only. You can find her poems and artwork inWords Across the Water, published by Fractal Edge Press.  

Website: http://caesarc.msu.domains/ 

Facebook page: https://www.facebook.com/bindiwankatterpi 

We recently marked a sad anniversary: the murder of four schoolgirls at the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama on 15 September 1963. I would like to pay tribute to them with this charcoal erasure drawing. Erasure seems like an apt metaphor here, because the act of erasing has made their figures, their real selves, emerge. Looking at the foreground, I feel as though there two paths, a dark path and a light one. Our country is standing at that junction today.


 

We have taken a brief hiatus to reassess the format of BREATHE. We've missed our connection with all of you, and are pleased to now introduce our new look and publication process. We now publish submission faster, as often as weekly, using a more streamlined editorial review and acceptance process. Submissions posted in order by date received. We will maintain a maximum of nine postings with the oldest postings moved to archives.

 


Dismantle the destructive influence of racism on the lives of Black, Indigenous and People of Color.
Artists educate, inspire and empower us to create a more just and compassionate future for all.
The arts are powerful tools to achieve social change.