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0:30
Native communities work to overcome trauma from government policies separating families.

1:14
Native communities work to overcome trauma from government policies separating families.

0:30
A love story of salmon, water and family that explores this deep connection for the Lummi people.

1:12
A love story of salmon, water and family that explores this deep connection for the Lummi people.

1:02
The rise of white supremacy and the beginnings of domestic terrorism.

2:57
Dr. Dorothy Johnson-Speight talks about losing her son and finding Mothers in Charge.

2:11
When a mother loses a child, they also lose a piece of themselves.

1:40
Community leaders work to prevent, intervene and heal from gun violence in Philadelphia.

0:59
Two residents recall the day they, as young children, witnessed the lynching of Cleo Wright in 1942.

0:59
A mother talks about her son's life in Chicago and Sikeston, MO before his death by police.

0:56
Before the death of Cleo Wright in 1942, lynching was never prosecuted as a federal crime.

16:10
A conversation about the film and podcast and what they examine and expose about silence and health.