Faith leaders, historians, and advocates are speaking out after the National Park Service removed its webpage dedicated to Rev. Pauli Murray, a pivotal figure in civil rights history who broke barriers as both a legal scholar and the first perceived Black woman ordained as an Episcopal priest.
“That’s fascism,” said Sarah Azaransky, a Murray scholar who co-authored the application that designated Murray’s childhood home a National Historic Landmark. “It’s trying to erase people and deny their humanity.”
Read Full Article »