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Church known as a birthplace of LA s Chicano civil rights movement earns national recognition

LOS ANGELES (RNS) Lydia Lopez was demonstrating in a picket line in 1968 to support Mexican American educator and activist Sal Castro, who was removed from the classroom after participating in the historic student walkouts, when UCLA professor Juan Gómez-Quiñones told her of a party at the Church of the Epiphany. Lopez loved parties so she decided to go. The Episcopal parish, located in the Los Angeles neighborhood of Lincoln Heights, was embellished with papel picado. Lopez could hear mariachis playing. She recalled being overwhelmed with emotions as she saw how a place of worship embraced her Mexican American identity.

The Rebel Nuns Who Stuck It to the Catholic Church—And the Man

The ‘Rebel’ Nuns Who Stuck It to the Catholic Church And the Man Kevin Fallon © Provided by The Daily Beast Courtesy Sundance Film Festival Any good Catholic or Catholic survivor can tell you how much their lives were shaped by nuns. What may surprise the rest of us is how society as we know it today has been molded, radicalized, and entirely transformed by them, too. “Can you smell the pot?” Lenore Dowling asks her friend from the Immaculate Heart Community, the two counting as joyful and passionate, sign-wielding participants at the 2018 Women’s March in Los Angeles. The pair are no strangers to the spirit of protest, nor to the skunky accoutrement that tends to waft through its surroundings. Within them, that spirit has been downright holy for decades, since they first took their sacred vows as nuns and then, later, when they felt compelled to request a dispensation from them.

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