Cutting hair and sending it to the Iranian delegation to the United Nations to support the women-led Iranian Revolution

A Quilt for Uvalde

Volunteer quilters at the Centro Cultural de la Raza and the Women’s Museum of California’s Education Center stitch together the layers of a quilt honoring the students and teachers murdered in an act of gun violence in Uvalde, Texas on May 24th, 2022.

They are using a vertical running stitch representing our tears flowing down the length of the quilt. Embroidered on the quilt are the following two poems by Poet Laureate, Amanda Gorman:

Schools scared to death.

Schools scared to death.

The truth is, one education under desks,

Stooped low from bullets;

That plunge when we ask

Where our children

Shall live

& how

& if

This alarm is how we know
We must be altered —
That we must differ or die,
That we must triumph or try.
Thus while hate cannot be terminated,
It can be transformed
Into a love that lets us live.

May we not just grieve, but give:
May we not just ache, but act;
May our signed right to bear arms
Never blind our sight from shared harm;
May we choose our children over chaos.
May another innocent never be lost.

Maybe everything hurts,
Our hearts shadowed & strange.
But only when everything hurts
May everything change.

Hymn for the Hurting

Everything hurts,
Our hearts shadowed and strange,
Minds made muddied and mute.
We carry tragedy, terrifying and true.
And yet none of it is new;
We knew it as home,
As horror,
As heritage.
Even our children
Cannot be children,
Cannot be.

Everything hurts.
It’s a hard time to be alive,
And even harder to stay that way.
We’re burdened to live out these days,
While at the same time, blessed to outlive them.