Hey, y’all! It’s holiday time, and your favorite social justice organizations want to celebrate with you!
On Thursday, December 19th from 6:00 to 8:00 pm, Mid-South Peace and Justice Center, Grow Memphis, Tennessee Immigrant and Refugee Rights Coalition, Memphis Bus Riders Union/Sindicato de Pasajeros, and H.O.P.E. (Homeless Organizing for Power and Equality) are all converging at our offices at 3573 Southern Ave. to bring out the December cheer!
Mark your calendars for this night, because there’s gonna be food, music, dancing, Jacob’s famous homemade “Triple Threat Axis of Evil” EGGNOG, and some eccentric holiday décor including MISTLETOE. woooooo.
Put on your red and green outfits (turtlenecks are cool!) and celebrate another year of great work with these organizations and the folks that make them possible—that’s you! Feel free to bring partners, friends, family members, and children, because the more… the merrier!
H.O.P.E. would like to proudly congratulate organizer/activist, Toni Whitfield, one of 


If you haven’t already noticed, it’s getting colder. Last night, temperatures dipped below freezing and this is just the beginning. Currently in Memphis, there are NO fully-free shelters that operate throughout the week. Memphis Union Mission, opens its doors to unsheltered men without cost only on nights when it is LITERALLY freezing. This means that many of our brothers and sisters will be doing the best they can to keep warm on these cold streets. Even on nights where the thermometer doesn’t hit 32 degrees, individuals without shelter are at serious risk of becoming ill, or worse.
H.O.P.E would like to once again thank
Join us Thursday, December 12th at 7pm, at Rhodes College in Blount Auditorium for an informal and informative discussion on criminalization in the age of mass incarceration.
Mid-South Peace and Justice Center held it’s three-day Core Organizer Training from November 8 – 10. Here are some post-evaluation reflections from training participants:
The Community-Police Relations (CPR) project held the final 2013 neighborhood forums for the Latino and LGBTQ communities. Both forums were well-attended, thanks to hard work by the CPR outreach team.
Improving community-police relations is a slow process that has begun with sharing stories. Our partner,
H.O.P.E. is the name of a Mid-South Peace and Justice Center-sponsored organization whose members are exclusively people currently, or have formerly experienced homelessness. H.O.P.E. has been working hard to develop several project areas that address the issues that are a priority to the homeless community. For meeting times and dates, call
For almost a year now, H.O.P.E. members have been organizing around documenting and reporting incidents of police harassment. Members elected to form a sub-group dubbed Street Watch with the goal of educating the public on their rights and using different methods to document potential cases of harassment, mistreatment or abuse by law enforcement or private security officers. The group initiated a series of Know-Your-Rights Workshops in conjunction with the public defenders office that they have held at different churches and community centers for the past five months.
Since then, representatives of
Mayor Wharton and our City Council need to acknowledge whether these 1st Amendment violations against the poor and homeless in our city are city policy or the actions of rogue officers. If rogue officers are to blame, then they need to be removed from the Police force. This needs to be done quickly, before our great city (already broken) is forced to pay settlements of lawsuits that are sure to come because of violations of our rights guaranteed by the U.S. Constitution!
The 10th annual Gandhi-King Conference is in full swing today with almost 400 middle and high school students from our community coming together at the
Medea Benjamin is a cofounder of both
Jaribu Hill is a civil and human rights attorney and Executive Director of the