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A peek into the lives of people : Emblems of belief can be an opportunity for expression for fallen veterans

A peek into the lives of people : Emblems of belief can be an opportunity for expression for fallen veterans
spokesman.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from spokesman.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.

Twin Cities nonprofit opens new kind of tiny home village — and it s all indoors

Richard Reeve Created: February 21, 2021 11:10 PM In a massive North Loop warehouse in Minneapolis, a unique tiny home shelter space is taking shape.  It’s called the Avivo Village  a shelter within a shelter.  “We’re calling them tiny homes, they really are rooms,” says Emily Bastian, Avivo’s vice president of ending homelessness. “Something COVID-safe, something that they could know that their belongings are going to be secured. That they could lock things up when they weren t here. Where they could go 24/7.   The $2 million dollar project was built in just four months. Richard Reeve/KSTP It’s part of a two-year, $6 million pilot program funded by state, county and city funds. 

Ocean Beach Cafe, SF s newest beachside restaurant, is making non-drinking cool

Ocean Beach Cafe, SF s newest beachside restaurant, is making non-drinking cool FacebookTwitterEmail Joshua James discusses some of the non-alcoholic spirits at his Ocean Beach Cafe near Ocean Beach in San Francisco, California on Jan. 25, 2021.Douglas Zimmerman/SFGATE After 20 years of bartending, Joshua James decided it was time to take a year off drinking. “I was deep in the craft cocktail world, beer brewing, wine and happy hours, and just trying to drink every beer in Asheville, North Carolina,” said James, who lived there most recently before moving to San Francisco. “And I was like, I’m taking a break.” He checked into Friendship House, a substance abuse recovery program for Native Americans in San Francisco (James is Tolowa). Two weeks in, COVID-19 hit but he knew he was exactly where he needed to be. By the end of the program, he’d discovered a newfound clarity.

Crane Song: Finding my way Home through Image, Myth, and Nature – Part 2 by Sara Wright

Recently, I returned from the Southwest where I was introduced to the ceremonies of the Pueblo peoples, ceremonies that reflected my own spiritual practice reinforcing its authenticity. This interlude also allowed me to be part of a people who had never lost access to their roots. They had never given up their ceremonies or surrendered their way of life. I returned to Maine with a much stronger sense of my Indigenous cultural identity than I had when I left. I hadn’t realized until I went to the Southwest how much this identity had been eroded by local people. Living in western Maine had brought me in contact with the frightening bias people have towards Indians; some are openly despised.

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