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Mobile church bridges racial divide through song, history

Mobile church bridges racial divide through song, history

Yahoo10-02-2025

MOBILE, Ala. (WKRG) — A Mobile Church continues its efforts to bridge the racial divide with a special Black History Month program, highlighting the talent and skills of African Americans.
From a booming choir, to the Excelsior band, hymns with black heritage, and a large gathering of members of a black leadership group, the Kappa League, in the pews, there's a lot to hear.
'Highlight is the music, the rhythm of the intellectual spaces that African-Americans just have shared and given to the United States,' said Kappa League Advisor Carl Cunningham Jr. This is the fourth annual Black History Month program at Christ Church Cathedral, a predominantly white congregation in downtown.
'It acknowledges a significant part of our heritage in history. It acknowledges the wideness and the depth of our community. It helps us to mend and heal the breach that has existed between us historically. And it allows us to acknowledge the gift to the younger generation as we move forward,' said Christ Church Cathedral Rector Beverly Gibson. It's been said Sunday is the most segregated day of the week and programs like this try to change that.
'Bridge it with hospitality. I think you bridge with shared endeavors. I think that it's important to respect the deep tradition and the church homes and lives of African Americans themselves and to acknowledge that that is of deep value,' said Gibson. The service begins with an uplifting medley of songs from the Coahoma Community College Choir out of Mississippi
'I think it educates and celebrates American history and also the work that we do in the Episcopal Church,' said Cunningham.
Copyright 2025 Nexstar Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.

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Jamaica's ‘crocodile guardian' is fighting to save the island's feared predators
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time8 minutes ago

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Jamaica's ‘crocodile guardian' is fighting to save the island's feared predators

Editor's Note: Call to Earth is a CNN editorial series committed to reporting on the environmental challenges facing our planet, together with the solutions. Rolex's Perpetual Planet Initiative has partnered with CNN to drive awareness and education around key sustainability issues and to inspire positive action. In the heat of the Jamaican sun, where the wetlands glisten and buzz with life, an ancient predator is vanishing. There are around 28 species of crocodiles found throughout the world's tropical and subtropical regions. But there is only one species in Jamaica, found primarily along the southern coast from St. Thomas to Westmoreland. Once revered and feared across the island, the American crocodile (Crocodylus acutus) has long ruled the mangroves and coastal lagoons. But in recent years, its population has been decimated, due to illegal hunting, habitat loss and plastic pollution, as well as killings prompted by a lingering fear among locals. 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He was startled to find that despite crocodiles being classified as endangered in 1971 under the Wildlife Protection Act, there was little practical conservation happening. 'The laws were there, but nobody was doing anything,' he says. 'The environmental agency was very under-resourced and still is to this day. And there was nobody really with expertise or knowledge on reptiles.' Henriques volunteered to assist the Jamaican government, carrying out crocodile rescues and providing rehabilitation, all while holding down a job in the citrus industry. He continued like this for almost 20 years, before a brief relocation to London, UK. When he returned to Jamaica in 2010, he launched what would become the Holland Bay Crocodile Sanctuary — a facility dedicated to rescue, rehabilitation and public education. The sanctuary, which lies on the edge of a wetland, is home to 27 adult crocodiles along with 18 baby crocs. 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It even features on the Jamaican coat of arms, which shows a crocodile perched atop a royal helmet and mantling, designed to symbolize the island's unique wildlife and natural heritage. 'They're like engineers of the ecosystem,' he says. 'They dig channels, control fish populations and keep the wetlands healthy.' He explains that the presence of these apex predators helps to regulate biodiversity within aquatic ecosystems by controlling prey populations and creating microhabitats that support various flora and fauna. But Henriques warns that because of poaching and habitat loss, the island no longer has many large male crocodiles left along the coastline: 'Most now are smaller. It's a serious shift.' 'What's happening in Jamaica reflects a global pattern — wetland species are disappearing, and with them, the health of the entire ecosystem,' he adds. Despite the challenges, there's a cautious sense of hope. 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