Letter from the Editor of CultureHoney.com, Georgia Sanders
Dear Readers: Culture Honey is an online travel and culture magazine “with heart”. That means that while we are passionate about travel and culture,…
Read MoreDear Readers: Culture Honey is an online travel and culture magazine “with heart”. That means that while we are passionate about travel and culture,…
Read MorePhotos by Georgia Sanders and Brian Biery There have been four protests in Pasadena so far this past week that I know about and…
Read MoreOn February 26, 2017 – the 5 year anniversary of the death of Trayvon Martin – over 75 people joined together with Culture Honey…
Read MorePhoto Credit: Caroline Leavitt @Leavittnovelist So often the history that is taught regarding black citizens is limited to a few solitary time periods or…
Read More50 years ago today Dr. Martin Luther King was shot and killed on a hotel balcony in Memphis, Tennessee. I was not taught enough…
Read More#WAKANADAFOREVER is the hashtag the audience left the movie theaters with after seeing the new Marvel Studios blockbuster film Black Panther. Directed by Ryan…
Read MoreOn the anniversary weekend of last year’s 2017 Presidential inauguration, I was able to mark my own participation in the historic Women’s March in…
Read MoreI recently had an appointment with an eye doctor. I have sarcoidosis, an inflammatory disease. My pulmonologist asked me to get my eyes checked,…
Read More‘Divide and conquer’ is worn out. It already has ravished us – “the human beings” – down to the very cells of our DNA….
Read MoreThe United States’ Pledge of Allegiance reads as follows: I pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America and to the…
Read MoreOver 50 years ago on April 16, 1963, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. wrote an open letter from a jail in Birmingham, Alabama where he was imprisoned. He wrote this letter to give challenge to those that would ask for civil rights to “wait”. He wrote this letter to those that said it was “inconvenient” timing for them to think or act in regard to the civil rights of the Black community. He wrote to those, especially those who were white, that sat in church pews and chairs across the country. He challenged the ideas of what it meant to be a person of faith, and his words challenge us today.
Read More“God has shown you, O mortal, what is good. And what does God require of you? To act justly and to love mercy and…
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