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Latest Articles Halashon Sianipar Latest Articles Halashon Sianipar

Making a home in Newark

A quiet Sunday unfolds in a meditation on home, empathy, and mutual aid. Through time with family and a prayer service at Delaney Hall, Halashon Sianipar and his kids realize community in simple acts of care.

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Latest Articles Matt Dragon Latest Articles Matt Dragon

Will Governor Sherrill hear voters?

NJeans and NYers are facing similar problems, yet the policy gap between the new Democratic administrations is wider than the Hudson River. Voters in NJ were clear – no more cuts, no more pain, no more terror. Invest in our neighborhoods, our schools, and our commutes, not in corporations or youth prisons. Failure to hear those voters will make Governor Mikie Sherrill a one-term centrist failure.

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Rory Pasquariello Rory Pasquariello

‘The very least we can do’: NJ Climate Superfund Act to help fund critical infrastructure

The bill aims to bring in funds from fossil-fuel extraction or refining companies that the NJ Department of Environmental Protection estimates to have caused over one billion metric tons of greenhouse-gas emissions from 1995–2024. The legislation also requires that 51 percent of those funds benefit overburdened communities, of which 5.2 million people reside. The money will be kept in a dedicated fund to be distributed in grants to municipalities.

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Law and Justice Rory Pasquariello Law and Justice Rory Pasquariello

Supporters march 103 miles to demand medical care and freedom for political prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal

Supporters of political prisoner Mumia Abu-Jamal led a 12-day, 103-mile march demanding an end to medical neglect and elder abuse in prisons, as well as to free Abu-Jamal. 

The march began on Nov. 28 in Philadelphia where Mumia was a member of the city’s chapter of the Black Panther Party and ended on Dec. 9 at the SCI Mahanoy Corrections Facility in Frackville where he is now incarcerated.

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Opinion Jennah Cherry Romain Opinion Jennah Cherry Romain

No one is safe just for existing: Remembering Sakia Gunn

Newark, NJ - In 2003, Sakia Gunn was walking home in Newark with her friends when a man pulled up, made advances, and did not like the answer he got. She said no. He stabbed her in the chest.

She did not survive.

She was only 15.

More than 20 years later, I still think about how easy it is for a girl to lose her life over something like that. Saying no. Walking away. Existing in the wrong place at the wrong time with the wrong person nearby. 

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Health and Education Jeanine Cava Health and Education Jeanine Cava

SNAP disruption underscores need to strengthen New Jersey’s full, diverse food security infrastructure

Trenton, NJ - The New Jersey Food Democracy Collaborative commends state leaders and philanthropic partners for acting quickly when the first-ever disruption of federal Supplemental Nutrition Assistance Program (SNAP) benefits occurred this fall, helping coordinate emergency food access and stabilize many households. Yet this unprecedented event must result in more than short-term triage — it should serve as a turning point for how we think about food security in New Jersey.

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Opinion Sadie Springer Opinion Sadie Springer

Maplewood’s illusion of progressivism

Maplewood, NJ - Maplewood and its sister town South Orange are historic towns nestled between Newark and Millburn/Short Hills, filled with quaint 20th-century houses, lush parks, a downtown lined with eclectic mom-and-pop shops, a rainbow pride crosswalk in front of town hall, and a sea of lawn signs declaring, “Hate has no home here.” White Brooklyn hipsters in search of a “diverse” suburb to raise their kids often find it in this town, creating a paradoxical cycle of whitewashing. 

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