All posts tagged: Civic

Promoting Civic Friendship: The Transformative Power of Public Spaces

Promoting Civic Friendship: The Transformative Power of Public Spaces

The neighborhood in Lisbon where I spend a lot of my time is densely populated. It has undergone many changes, with new cafes and restaurants catering to youngsters as well as a significant influx of immigrants. Increased population and tourism put pressure on infrastructure, and local branches of government have been slow to respond. The bus I take is overcrowded. Garbage collection is falling behind. The local hospital is understaffed and underqualified: almost no one can address those seeking care in English. Immigrants are often met with hostility and frustration. The result is a chaotic neighborhood that feels vibrant and diverse, but also exasperating and hostile. It’s a striking contrast with the recent history of some areas surrounding this neighborhood, which were part of an innovative project: the SAAL—Serviço de Apoio Ambulatório Local, which was meant to “support, through the municipal council, initiatives by poorly housed populations to collaborate in transforming their own neighbourhoods” (my translation). When it was abruptly terminated in 1976, SAAL counted 41,665 families involved, 2,259 homes that had started to be …

Metropolitan AME pastor’s new book offers ancestral veneration as guide to civic engagement

Metropolitan AME pastor’s new book offers ancestral veneration as guide to civic engagement

(RNS) — When visiting his maternal grandmother’s house in Florida, the Rev. William Lamar IV remembered feeling “frightened” when he stared at the picture of a great-aunt hung up prominently on the wall. It wasn’t until his grandmother explained what the portrait represented that he began appreciating it. “This picture of Aunt Viney is the first ancestor that reached out for me beyond time and space, to teach me something about who I was, biologically and genetically,” Lamar said in a recent interview with Religion News Service. “But also to teach me about what kind of human being I was supposed to be.” Today, Lamar is the pastor of Metropolitan African Methodist Episcopal Church in Washington, D.C., a historic Black church that was vandalized by Proud Boys members in 2020 and, after a lawsuit, was awarded the trademark rights to the alt-right group’s logo. In his book, “Ancestors: Those Who Bless Us, Curse Us, and Hold Us,” releasing Tuesday (March 3), Lamar hopes to share what ancestral veneration has taught him about civic engagement and navigating …

Honda Civic Sport: Creature comforts

Honda Civic Sport: Creature comforts

Get our weekly Drive Smart newsletter for motoring news, reviews and advice from EV editor Steve Fowler Get motoring news, reviews and advice from EV editor Steve Fowler Get our EV editor’s weekly Drive Smart newsletter So here’s a car that you can really covet: the Honda Civic. I know. Unlikely. It’s not a supercar. It’s not a “premium” brand. It’s not a still-fashionable SUV or a crossover, but a straightforward five-door, five-seater hatch. It’s pretty much no longer even got its high performance Type R variant as a “halo” model, driven off the market by the emissions regulations (understandable but regrettable – you may still be able to lay your hands on a future classic). And, well, it’s a Honda Civic, which inevitably means it’s associated with an older, more sedate sort of motoring clientele. People such as me, in fact. The styling has been recently updated and the interior materials improved, and it’s an obviously well-built machine – but tastefully stylish rather than modish and hi-tech like, say, the latest kit coming in …