The Video & Photo Extension of Notes from an Aspiring Humanitarian (N.A.H.) By Relando Thompkins, MSW
Election Day is 2 weeks from today. In case you’ve missed it, I’ve gathered footage from this year’s presidential debates for your reference.
First Presidential Debate from the University of Denver
Aired: Wednesday, October 3rd, 2012
Moderated by Jim Lehrer
Vice Presidential Debate from Centre College
Aired: Thursday, October 11th, 2012
Moderated by Martha Raddatz
Second Presidential Debate from Hofstra University
Aired: Tuesday, October 16th, 2012
Moderated by Candy Crowley
Final Presidential Debate from Lynn University in Boca Raton
Aired: Monday, October 22nd, 2012
Moderated by Bob Schieffer
Make sure to get out the vote on Tuesday, November 6th, 2012.
Grace & Peace,
Relando Thompkins, MSW
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Notes from an Aspiring Humanitarian by Relando Thompkins is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
I came across this video online through The Nation’s Youtube Channel. Contains strong language.
Video Description: “A secret audio recording of a stop-and-frisk in action sheds unprecedented light on a practice that has put the city’s young people of color in the NYPD’s crosshairs.” Read the full story
Directed by Ross Tuttle
Produced by Ross Tuttle, Erin Schneider, Stephen Maing
Camera by Ross Tuttle, Stephen Maing
Editing by Stephen Maing, Carla Ruff
This practice has to end. Now.
Share your thoughts.
Grace & Peace,
Relando Thompkins, MSW
Notes from an Aspiring Humanitarian by Relando Thompkins is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
(N.A.H.) can’t grow without your help. If you enjoyed this post, please use any of the social media buttons below to like and/or click +1, etc to share this post with others.
You can also join the (N.A.H.) Community on Facebook, Follow my main website at RelandoThompkins.com, or connect with me on twitter @Relando_T and @N_A_H_Blog.
Note: This post is also live on Notes from an Aspiring Humanitarian’s main Blog.
Here’s a video I found online the other day that caused me to reflect on my work and life. Check it out for yourself and let me know what you think.
Watching this video reminded me of life.
Some days I’ve been, (and might still be at times) the dolphin, needing someone to help me to breathe again, and some days I’ve been (and will still need to be) the person pulling another back to safety, acceptance, or whatever the water might represent for them at the time.
For me, it was another reminder of the interconnectedness of us all, and that I am who I am because of others.
What do you think?
Grace & Peace,
Relando Thompkins, MSW
Notes from an Aspiring Humanitarian by Relando Thompkins is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
(N.A.H.) can’t grow without your help. If you enjoyed this post, please use any of the social media buttons below to like and/or click +1, etc to share this post with others.
You can also join the (N.A.H.) Community on Facebook, Follow my main website at RelandoThompkins.com, or connect with me on twitter @Relando_T and @N_A_H_Blog.
I saw this photo across Facebook today, and wanted to share it with you.
Your Thoughts?
Grace & Peace,
Relando Thompkins, MSW
Notes from an Aspiring Humanitarian by Relando Thompkins is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
(N.A.H.) can’t grow without your help. If you enjoyed this post, please use any of the social media buttons below to like and/or click +1, etc to share this post with others.
You can also join the (N.A.H.) Community on Facebook, Follow my main website at RelandoThompkins.com, or connect with me on twitter @Relando_T and @N_A_H_Blog.
In this past year, I’ve spent some time with learning ways to engage with the male perpetrators of domestic violence, helping them to be able to use productive, non-abusive ways to resolve conflicts both internal and external that can produce outcomes that are not harmful to themselves, their partners, and their relationships.
One day after a session, my supervisor showed me something that I thought was very thought-provoking. It was in empty cigarette carton that a former participant had given him before completing the program.
The message I saw came through so loud that I had to take a picture of the carton and share it with you.
This is the front of the package:
Now this is a picture of the back of the package:
Initially one might wonder, how could a person continue to smoke with the warning literally spelled out in such HUGE letters on the package?
Knowing the possible consequences of using, why continue? Why not try to quit?
One answer?
There is a decision making process in which the person involved makes a conscious choice (or choices if you think about finishing the whole pack) to ignore the messages on the box, and continue to smoke.
Don’t get caught up on this one example though. This post isn’t really about smoking as much as it’s about life.
There are plenty of other ways this scenario can play out in which we are confronted with a choice with similar consequences. The same crossroads experience that I’m describing here can manifest itself in a in a variety of other areas.
Looking at this carton really makes me wonder about the areas in our lives where the writing might be on the wall just as large as, or possibly even larger than the print on this carton, and how many times we might choose to ignore the signs and make choices that are harmful to us in the long run. This carton reminds me of the harmful role denial can play in our lives if we continue to yield to it.
“How often do we choose not to know, & actively find ways to quiet the voices of those who are trying to tell us?”–Naomi Tutu
Sometimes we can be headed down a wrong road, and not even recognize it. Sometimes, the writing can be on the wall, and we might not be able to see it. So seeing the carton also reminds me to appreciate others in my life who may see things that I might not necessarily see, and to keep my heart and mind open so that I may hear what they would have to say.
Your Thoughts?
Grace & Peace,
Relando Thompkins, MSW
Notes from an Aspiring Humanitarian by Relando Thompkins is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 Unported License.
(N.A.H.) can’t grow without your help. If you enjoyed this post, please use any of the social media buttons below to like and/or click +1, etc to share this post with others.
You can also join the (N.A.H.) Community on Facebook, Follow my main website at RelandoThompkins.com, or connect with me on twitter @Relando_T and @N_A_H_Blog.
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These photos were shared with me this morning via email, and I’m sharing them with you.
The title of this sculpture is “Vicissitudes”.
“Underwater Sculpture Honoring Africans Thrown Overboard”
“This is located in the Caribbean Sea off the coast of Grenada under water… Pass it along so more people will know about this wonderful work of art in honor of those who perished so tragically.”
Artist: Jason DeCaires Taylor
Caption: “Underwater sculpture, in Grenada, in honor of our African Ancestors who were thrown overboard the slave ships during the Middle Passage of the African Holocaust.”
–Artist, Jason DeCaires Taylor
To learn more about Jason DeCaires Taylor’s work, or to see additional photos of Vicissitudes, feel free to visit his website.
(N.A.H.) can’t grow without your help. If you enjoyed this post, please use any of the social media buttons below to like and/or click +1, etc to share this post with others.
You can also join the (N.A.H.) Community on Facebook, Follow my main website at RelandoThompkins.com, or connect with me on twitter @Relando_T and @N_A_H_Blog.
I’m passing along a video that a friend of mine sent me this morning that was created by a personal friend of hers regarding the Oak Creek Sikh Temple shooting. Watch the video and do some reading on what took place.
Response to shooting at Oak Creek Sikh Temple
As I’ve written in my previous post: “Dealing with Conflict: A Tale of Monsters and 2 Wolves“:
“The Unheard Voices of 9/11 campaign was launched by the Sikh Coalition, the largest Sikh civil rights organization in the United States to highlight the backlash of discrimination and violence toward Muslims and those perceived to be Muslims that followed the September 11th attacks.
Even today, American citizens who fit into a certain stereotype continue to be targeted for hate crimes, employment discrimination, and school bullying by ordinary citizens, and profiling by law enforcement agencies.
Here, Rabia Said remembers an experience she had with discrimination when she was eight years old.
The organization South Asian Americans Leading Together (SAALT) created a video campaign asserting that America is for all of us.”
Attempting to “right” wrongs that we feel were perpetuated by others, especially against those who had nothing to do with what happened in the first place only serves to continue the cycle of wrongdoing.
Grace & Peace,
(N.A.H.) can’t grow without your help. If you enjoyed this post, please use any of the social media buttons below to like and/or click +1, etc to share this post with others.
You can also join the (N.A.H.) Community on Facebook, Follow my main website at RelandoThompkins.com, or connect with me on twitter @Relando_T and @N_A_H_Blog.
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This is social justice in action. Sisters Action Media is “an after school program for teenage girls in Philadelphia where creativity in media meets a critical eye for change”. Nuala Cabral, one of the directors of this program has also been featured in Notes from an Aspiring Humanitarian’s The People Who Inspire Series.
Video Description: “What does homophobia in schools look like? And how can we make schools safer spaces for LGBTQ students? In this short documentary, Sisters Action Media interviews students, teachers, administrators and community advocates about confronting homophobia in our schools.”
Learn more about this Sisters Action Media video project by visiting the original post ” Hate in the Hallways: Challenging Homophobia in Schools“.
(N.A.H.) can’t grow without your help. If you enjoyed this post, please use any of the social media buttons below to like and/or click +1, etc to share this post with others.
You can also join the (N.A.H.) Community on Facebook, Follow my main website at RelandoThompkins.com, or connect with me on twitter @Relando_T and @N_A_H_Blog.
I’m still in the development phase of this blog, and as a part of that process I’ve been playing around with different ideas for this NAHVideo’s Logo. For the time being, I will be using this banner for branding purposes. You’ll be seeing it around soon.
(N.A.H.) can’t grow without your help. If you enjoyed this post, please use any of the social media buttons below to like and/or click +1, etc to share this post with others.
You can also join the (N.A.H.) Community on Facebook, Follow my main website at RelandoThompkins.com, or connect with me on twitter @Relando_T and @N_A_H_Blog.
This photo isn’t an (N.A.H.) Original, it was shared by Notes from an Aspiring Humanitarian community Member Linda Grobman. I’m sharing it with you because I thought it was very thought provoking, and could serve to help us begin some meaningful conversations.
What comes to your mind when you see these steps?
Are there any other steps you would add that we would need to work through on the path towards peace?
(N.A.H.) can’t grow without your help. If you enjoyed this post, please use any of the social media buttons below to like and/or click +1, etc to share this post with others.
You can also join the (N.A.H.) Community on Facebook, Follow my main website at RelandoThompkins.com, or connect with me on twitter @Relando_T and @N_A_H_Blog.

Born and raised in the Brightmoor community on the west side of Detroit, MI, and a product of Detroit Public Schools, Relando Thompkins desires to help those who believe that they are outcast, those who believe that no one cares for them, and those who believe that they cannot change their situations.
Through service, conflict resolution through non-violent communication, and social action, he works to build more equitable and inclusive communities and to increase intercultural understanding.
In addition, he is also interested in social justice education and intergroup dialogue. His role as an adult facilitator in the Intergroup Dialogue/Social Change Agents program: a high school-based intergroup dialogue project currently operating in high schools in the Ann Arbor/Ypsilanti area has allowed him to engage high school students in conversations and skill building activities about conflict, social identities, privilege, oppression, and social justice for the purpose of helping them to enhance their ability to peacefully resolve conflicts, build relationships with people whom they believe to be different from them, and to understand the broad social issues that underlie group tensions and prejudice.
Thompkins hopes to be able to continue grow in this area, so that he may be able to address issues of equity and inclusion in higher education, while bridging gaps and making connections across differences between people in the broader community as well. Relando also has a strong interest in producing in the area of film and video, and longs to find ways to incorporate this medium into his work.
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