RSVP for DSLUE, Philando Castile RF, & MLK Scholars’ Black History Month Program – 2/25/2026

The Descendants of the St. Louis University Enslaved, Philando Castile Relief Foundation, and Saint Louis University’s Martin Luther King, Jr. Scholars presents “Healing Harm: Reckoning with Truth, Justice, and Accountability.”

Featured Panelists: Robin Proudie (DSLUE), Valerie Castile (Philando Castile Relief Foundation), and Julian Garcia (MLK Scholar / Activist)
Moderator: Jonathan Pulphus, Author

 

Date/Time: February 25th, 2026 at 6:00pm (Doors open at 5:30pm)
Location: Center for Global Citizenship (On the campus of Saint Louis University/building with flags across top)
3672 West Pine Mall, St. Louis, MO 63108

RSVP for DSLUE, Philando Castile RF, & MLK Scholars’ Black History Month Program – 2/25/2026

The Descendants of the St. Louis University Enslaved, Philando Castile Relief Foundation, and Saint Louis University’s Martin Luther King, Jr. Scholars presents “Healing Harm: Reckoning with Truth, Justice, and Accountability.”

Featured Panelists: Robin Proudie (DSLUE), Valerie Castile (Philando Castile Relief Foundation), and Julian Garcia (MLK Scholar / Activist)
Moderator: Jonathan Pulphus, Author

 

Date/Time: February 25th, 2026 at 6:00pm (Doors open at 5:30pm)
Location: Center for Global Citizenship (On the campus of Saint Louis University/building with flags across top)
3672 West Pine Mall, St. Louis, MO 63108

Upcoming Events

Bread & Roses Missouri – 2/19 – 2/22/26

Experience the untold story of the 1933 Funsten Nutpickers Strike in St. Louis. Black women, facing low wages, unsafe conditions, and Jim Crow segregation, organized over 2,000 workers across five factories. With a brick in one hand and a bible in the other, their bold act of solidarity positioned St. Louis at the intersection of workers’ and civil rights.

Read More »

Get Updates

All Rights Reserved © 2013 - 2026

Upcoming Events

Bread & Roses Missouri – 2/19 – 2/22/26

Experience the untold story of the 1933 Funsten Nutpickers Strike in St. Louis. Black women, facing low wages, unsafe conditions, and Jim Crow segregation, organized over 2,000 workers across five factories. With a brick in one hand and a bible in the other, their bold act of solidarity positioned St. Louis at the intersection of workers’ and civil rights.

Read More »

Get Updates

All Rights Reserved © 2013 - 2026