Good evening, everybody. Welcome to the Ann Arbor District library. Thank you so much for out tonight. My name is emily and im on the events team here. We want to thank our partners at literati for bringing us another wonderful event with professor williams evening. So just a really introduction so we can get onto the program Kidada Williams is associate professor of history at wayne university. She is the author. They left great marks on me africanamerican testimonies of racial violence from emancipation to world war one. She is the creator of the seizing freedom podcast, and shes here tonight to speak about her new book i saw death coming a history of terror and survival in the war against reconstruction. So we will have a talk tonight. Well have a q a. I will be running the round the room with a mic so we can speak into it because were recording tonight and live streaming. So we want folks at to be able to hear your questions. Literati is in the foyer. They are selling books this ev
But for about 1000 years after that it lay dormant. Only in the 20th century did a renewed understanding of this ministry and an awareness of the church is need for it become resurrected. And the prescription for three founding was given and the documents of the second vatican council, particularly in. 1968, just over half a century ago, the catholic bishops of the United States petition pope paul the sixth to approve very founding of this ministry. In the halfcentury since then, more than 18,000 men in the United States have been ordained to this office. We are talking about the office of deacon. Today our guest is one of the deacons who is ordained for the archdiocese of San Francisco. After this brief break , come back and stay with us come as we learn about this ancient catholic vocation, and its new application. Thank you for joining us on mosaic. Our guest today , is deacon michael. You are a deacon in the archdiocese of San Francisco. In ordained minister. Everything i know abou
Welcome to the Ann Arbor District library. Thank you so much for out tonight. My name is emily and im on the events team here. We want to thank our partners at literati for bringing us another wonderful event with professor williams evening. So just a really introduction so we can get onto the program Kidada Williams is associate professor of history at wayne university. She is the author. They left great marks on me africanamerican testimonies of racial violence from emancipation to world war one. She is the creator of the seizing freedom podcast, and shes here tonight to speak about her new book i saw death coming a history of terror and survival in the war against reconstruction. So we will have a talk tonight. Well have a q a. I will be running the round the room with a mic so we can speak into it because were recording tonight and live streaming. So we want folks at to be able to hear your questions. Literati is in the foyer. They are selling books this evening. You can pick one u
Good evening, everybody. Welcome to the Ann Arbor District library. Thank you so much for out tonight. My name is emily and im on the events team here. We want to thank our partners at literati for bringing us another wonderful event with professor williams evening. So just a really introduction so we can get onto the program Kidada Williams is associate professor of history at wayne university. She is the author. They left great marks on me africanamerican testimonies of racial violence from emancipation to world war one. She is the creator of the seizing freedom podcast, and shes here tonight to speak about her new book i saw death coming a history of terror and survival in the war against reconstruction. So we will have a talk tonight. Well have a q a. I will be running the round the room with a mic so we can speak into it because were recording tonight and live streaming. So we want folks at to be able to hear your questions. Literati is in the foyer. They are selling books this ev
This brilliant man builds a bridge between. Past, present, and, it seems to me, the future, he takes the national turkic bashkar melos and makes it the music of the 20th century, this is fantastic, and this was our goal when we created this project, and i created this project together with the peoples artist of the republic bashkartstan, rustam gzatulin, and we wanted to come up with what is fashionable, modern, what you can dance to, but at the same time, so that it is associated with antiquity, with culture, with ethnicity, in my project i play 15 instruments and combine all this with fashionable modern music, and it turns out this kind of show, you didnt have to look too hard, it seems to me that in the villages of bashshk all this is still sung, it exists, it all exists, its all sung, but it so happened, my father dreamed of becoming artist, wow, he well, somehow it didnt work out in soviet times, when i was born, he started playing the kurai for me every day, kurai, what is this k