Group Of Senators Wants To Posthumously Award The Medal Of Honor To A Black Man A group of U.S. senators wants to posthumously award the Medal of Honor to a Black serviceman who took part in the D-Day landings in France during World War II. Eleanor Beardsley
Many Black People Say Police Killings Aren't 'Going To Be Fixed Overnight' Many Black Americans who spoke to NPR said while they don't believe this current movement will change everything today, they hope it will help lead to change in generations to come. Christianna Silva
Reporter's Notebook: Covering New York's Racial Justice Protests While tear gas and rage get most of the attention in the demonstrations, there are also tender and hopeful moments — including singing, poetry, and talk of healing — taking place. Brian Mann
'Cuties' Calls Out The Hypersexualization Of Young Girls - And Gets Criticized The new French film, Cuties, is about an 11-year old Senegalese Muslim girl growing up in Paris and struggling with the contradictions between her strict upbringing and the demands of social media. Rebecca Rosman
Jacob Blake Shares Bedside Video From Hospital: 'Every 24 Hours There's Pain' Blake spoke about recovery and community from his hospital bed after being shot seven times by police in Kenosha, Wis., last month. Christianna Silva
Master P Launches Food Line To Bring Diversity To Packaged Food NPR's Michel Martin talks to rapper and entrepreneur Percy Miller, aka Master P, about why he's jumping into the packaged food business as many companies reexamine their racist imagery.
Trump Tells Agencies To End Trainings On 'White Privilege' And 'Critical Race Theory' The director of the Office of Management and Budget told agency heads on Friday that such trainings were "divisive" and "anti-American." Matthew S. Schwartz
How Black Women Athletes Paved The Way For The NBA Strike The wildcat strike was unprecedented for the NBA — but the world of professional basketball is no stranger to protesting for Black lives. Alyssa Jeong Perry
GWU Investigating Whether White Professor Invented Her Black Identity "You should absolutely cancel me, and I absolutely cancel myself," says a blog post signed Jessica A. Krug. That's also the name of a historian of the African Diaspora at George Washington University. Laurel Wamsley
Oklahoma Lawsuit Seeks Reparations In Connection To 1921 Tulsa Massacre As many as 300 African American residents were slaughtered when white mobs descended on Tulsa's Greenwood district nearly a century ago. The lead plaintiff is a 105-year-old survivor of the massacre. Brakkton Booker