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Edith Diehl - Across the Street From Power:

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In stillness, dignity, and quiet power. Spoken Word  Edith Diehl - Across the Street From Power:  Across the Street from Power Across the street from power— not inside it, not seated at its long polished tables, not echoing in chambers of decision— but across the street… There stands a quiet. A building, yes— but more than brick, more than glass— a pause… a breath… a remembering. Across from the United Nations, where voices rise in urgency, where nations speak in measured tones and unmeasured tension— there is another language. Soft. Unwritten. Felt. Edith Diehl knew this language. She did not stand at podiums. She did not draft resolutions. She listened… for what was missing. “What if,” she wondered, “power had a place to rest?” What if decisions— heavy with consequence— could pass through a moment of stillness before becoming action? So she wove. Not arguments— but atmosphere. Not control— but care. Stone by stone, prayer by prayer, woman by woman— they built the Church Cent...

WikiExplorers Meetup: The "Blue Room" & The Chemistry of the Rinse Cycle

​ WikiExplorers Meetup: The "Blue Room" & The Chemistry of the Rinse Cycle ​ Host:  Ms. Rivers Theme: From Africa to the Laundry Tub: Recovering African Mineral Knowledge ​1. The "Edit-a-Thon" Focus: Bridging the Gaps ​Our goal for this session is to improve Wikipedia entries related to George Washington Carver , Laundry Bluing , and Traditional Pigments . We want to ensure the "Indigenous Science" is cited alongside the Western chemistry. ​ Target Page: [George Washington Carver] * Task: Add a section on the "Blue Room" and his synthesis of pigments from Alabama clay as a form of economic sovereignty. ​ Target Page: [Bluing (fabric)] ​ Task: Document the connection between West African indigo expertise and the American domestic tradition of optical brighteners. ​ Target Page: [Ochre] ​ Task: Link the 70,000-year history of heat-treating minerals in Africa to modern chemical processes used in the American South. ​2. ...

The Inner Room

The mental and spiritual space where creativity, peace, and selfhood can exist even when the outer world is crowded. The Inner Room: The Inner Room: A Space No One Can Take The writer Virginia Woolf once argued in her famous essay A Room of One's Own that women needed money and a room of their own in order to write and create freely. At the time she wrote this in 1929, many women were excluded from universities, professional life, and literary circles. Woolf was speaking about independence—about the practical conditions necessary for creativity. History shows that many women, especially those living under difficult circumstances, created powerful works of imagination even without such a room. They found another kind of space.  An inner room. This inner room is not made of wood, brick, or walls. It is made of thought, reflection, and quiet awareness. It is the mental sanctuary where a person gathers themselves and listens to their own voice. For some women, that inner room appeared ...

Three Surprising Places on Earth That Are Getting Greener

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Three Surprising Places on Earth That Are Getting Greener Satellite observations over the past several decades have revealed a surprising trend: in some regions of the world, vegetation is increasing rather than declining. Scientists studying satellite data from NASA have identified several regions where landscapes are becoming noticeably greener. While this greening does not erase environmental challenges such as climate change or deforestation, it shows that Earth’s ecosystems are dynamic and capable of recovery under certain conditions. Here are three surprising regions where satellites have detected increasing vegetation. 1. The Sahel Region of Africa One of the most unexpected examples of greening is occurring in the Sahel, the semi-arid region stretching across Africa just south of the Sahara Desert. During the 1970s and 1980s, the Sahel became famous for devastating droughts and famine. Many scientists feared the desert would continue expanding southward. However, satellite data...

The Planet Is Quietly Healing in Some Places

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  The Planet Is Quietly Healing in Some Places When people talk about the environment today, the conversation often centers on crisis—climate change, deforestation, pollution, and disappearing species. These concerns are real and serious. Yet, while much of the world focuses on environmental decline, satellites orbiting high above Earth have revealed something unexpected: in some places, the planet is quietly becoming greener. The discovery emerged from long-term satellite observations conducted by organizations such as NASA. By measuring how plants reflect light, scientists can track vegetation growth across the entire globe. Over the past few decades, these measurements have revealed a surprising trend—large areas of Earth are experiencing increased plant growth and vegetation cover. This phenomenon is sometimes called “global greening.” It does not mean environmental problems have disappeared. But it does reveal something hopeful: the Earth still has the ability to recover, espe...

Blue Gold" and Indigo

  The "bluing" routine in whitening white fading clothes doing laundry  is a story of global chemistry and cultural survival. ​The practice of "bluing" laundry in America is a fascinating blend of European domestic manuals and the sophisticated botanical knowledge of enslaved West Africans. ​1. The Source: "Blue Gold" and Indigo ​In the 1700s, Americans learned to blue their laundry primarily because of the Indigo trade. ​ The African Expertise: While colonial history often credits a slaveholder's daughter (Eliza Lucas Pinckney) for the "discovery" of indigo in South Carolina, the actual success of the crop relied entirely on the indigenous knowledge of enslaved people from West Africa. In regions like Mali and Nigeria, communities had been master dyers and chemists for centuries. ​ The Laundry Link: Enslaved women, who performed the vast majority of the laundry for both their own families and the plantations, were the ones who pion...

The Azure in the Clay: Dr. Carver’s "Blue Room" and the Ancient Legacy of the Earth Canvas

The Azure in the Clay: Dr. Carver’s "Blue Room" and the Ancient Legacy of the Earth Canvas ​In the heart of Tuskegee, Alabama, sits a space of profound chemical and cultural synthesis: the "Blue Room" at the George Washington Carver Museum. While Dr. Carver is often remembered for the peanut, his most sophisticated "System Synthesis" may well have been his rediscovery of "Carver Blue" —a brilliant pigment extracted from the local red clay. ​For the WikiExplorers and the Alkebulan study group, the Blue Room isn’t just a gallery; it is a bridge. It connects the biological resilience of the American South to a 100,000-year lineage of African mineral technology. ​ Engineering Beauty from "Dirt" ​Dr. Carver’s work was a masterclass in biomimicry and resourcefulness. He operated as what we might call a "Brain Pilot"—using the executive functions of observation and synthesis to solve the problems of poverty. In the early 20th...