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Page 9 - மனிதன் உரிமைகள் அருங்காட்சியகம் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana

Panel Discussion on Equity and Inclusivity—What It Means in the Workplace

Panel Discussion on Equity and Inclusivity What It Means in the Workplace A new quarterly series from D CEO, which launches March 3, features C-Suite leaders who are helping to pave the way. By D CEO Staff Published in Business & Economy February 23, 2021 2:52 pm D CEO is expanding its diversity and inclusion thought leadership platform with a new series of quarterly panel discussion events. We’ll address pressing diversity, inclusion, and equity topics and conversations in the workplace and beyond. Our first event, coming up on March 3, will be a deep dive into what equity and inclusion truly mean for business, featuring three exceptional leaders:

Dallas Holocaust and Human Rights Museum Expresses Deep Concern that Polish Court Ruling May Compromise Holocaust Scholarship

Dallas Holocaust and Human Rights Museum Expresses Deep Concern that Polish Court Ruling May Compromise Holocaust Scholarship News provided by Share this article Share this article DALLAS, Feb. 23, 2021 /PRNewswire/  The Dallas Holocaust and Human Rights Museum is deeply concerned over a recent ruling by a Polish court that may compromise the future of Holocaust scholarship in Poland. Poland has long struggled to come to grips with its role in the Holocaust, as both victim and perpetrator.  Its 2018 law banning statements that accuse the Polish state and nation of complicity in Nazi crimes deliberately obscures the participation of Polish collaborators in the murder of Jews.

Unifying America: Dallas Holocaust & Human Rights Museum Refreshes Exhibit As Threat Of White Supremacist Violence Increases

Unifying America: Dallas Holocaust & Human Rights Museum Refreshes Exhibit As Threat Of White Supremacist Violence Increases Syndicated Local – CBS Dallas / Fort Worth DALLAS (CBSDFW.COM) A recent federal report outlining the rising threat of violent white supremacists has prompted the Dallas Holocaust and Human Rights Museum to refresh its exhibit of “The Fight for Civil Rights in the South.” The Museum is featuring the deadly bombing of the 16th Street Baptist Church in Birmingham, Alabama. The KKK planted sticks of dynamite outside the basement and they exploded at 10:22 Sunday morning, September 15, 1963. Dale Long, who was 11 years old at the time, was in the church with his nine year old brother Kenneth. “I was in the basement of the church. I noticed that some were bleeding, many were crying. So many people, and it dawned on me, once I smelled the pungent odor of gun powder, I realized the church had been bombed with people inside.”

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