Community News
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Local Organizations
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Home of the Innocents - Established in 1880, the Home provides a range of residential and community-based services. Serving more than 10,000 children and their families last year, programs include clinical treatment services, crisis and intervention services, therapeutic foster care and adoption services, and a pediatric convalescent center for children who are medically complex or terminally ill.
Community Foundation of Louisville - The Community Foundation of Louisville connects donors, nonprofits and civic partners to create lasting impact for people and places. Founded in 1984, the Community Foundation is one of the largest charitable foundations in Kentucky with more than 2,200 charitable funds. Each fund has its own charitable purpose as defined by its donors. In 2020, distributions from these funds made over 11,700 grants totaling over $68 million, approximately 82% of which stayed in Kentucky and Southern Indiana to support area nonprofits.
Center For Neighborhoods - For 50 years the Center For Neighborhoods has cultivated grassroots leadership, provided leadership education, partnered with neighborhoods in community planning efforts, facilitated civic dialogue among stakeholders and actively participated in neighborhood-based development & improvement projects.
WHAS Crusade for Children - The WHAS Crusade for Children, Inc. established in 1954 by WHAS-TV, raises money for agencies, schools and hospitals to make life better for children with special needs.
Fund for the Arts - At Fund for the Arts, we believe that the arts are for all and more than that, that the arts live within all of us. Many of us are artists and have always been artists, whether or not we make a living creating art. But this thing that we call life and the reality check that comes along with it has convinced us that we can’t find a way to make it through life being who we are – artists. Instead, we feel we have to try to find ourselves in something else.
,The James Graham Brown Foundation - The James Graham Brown Foundation cultivates progress and civic pride through philanthropic investments that leads to more prosperous and equitable communities and promotes the image of Kentucky and Louisville and the well being of its citizens. Areas of focus include education and workforce, community and economic prosperity, and quality of life.
Dare to Care - Dare to Care partners with local social service agencies, such as food pantries, shelters and emergency kitchens to distribute food to the Louisville community. In the past year, Dare to Care and its partners provided 21.7 million meals to residents in need. It also fights hunger through programs targeting in-school hunger, nutrition education and senior citizens.
Change Today, Change Tomorrow - Change Today, Change Tomorrow Is A Black Woman Led Non-Profit Organization In Louisville, KY.
Blessings in a Backpack - Every school-aged child in America has the nourishment needed to learn and grow. As a leader in the movement to end childhood hunger, Blessings in a Backpack strives to ensure children do not go hungry on the weekends by empowering individuals and communities to take action.
Kentucky Refugee Ministries - Together as a community, we resettle refugees and welcome immigrants. Through KRM, you encourage hope, advocate for newcomers, and transform the lives of those seeking safety.
Upcoming Events

2023 Beerman Award for Social Justice in Action Celebration
The Leonard I. Beerman Foundation for Peace and Justice honors the memory of Rabbi Leonard I. Beerman (1921–2014), a courageous and compassionate religious leader, social activist, and champion of peace and human rights. The Foundation recognizes and supports organizations, programs and activities similarly dedicated to improving the human condition.

I Can’t Breathe
A night of entertainment involving the discussion of racial inequality and the increase of awareness and knowledge related to the topic.

UW Public Lectures: From Artistic Joy to Collective Wellness
Marc Bamuthi Joseph is a 2017 TED Global Fellow, an inaugural recipient of the Guggenheim Social Practice initiative, and an honoree of the United States Artists Rockefeller Fellowship. Bamuthi’s opera libretto, We Shall Not Be Moved, was named one of 2017’s “Best Classical Music Performances” by The New York Times. His evening length work created…

UW Public Lectures: Building Scyborgs: An Evening on Decolonization
Join scholar, organizer, and co-conspirator K. Wayne Yang as he shares stories about decolonizing endeavors from past, present, future and speculative somewheres. How do we bend our own complicity in colonial institutions to forward Indigenous, Black, queer, and Other futures locally and globally? Come ready to consider your own scyborg powers and plans. K. Wayne…

UW Public Lectures: Tina Campt
Dr. Tina Campt is a black feminist theorist of visual culture and contemporary art and lead convener of the Practicing Refusal Collective and the Sojourner Project. She began her career as a historian of modern Germany, earning a Ph.D. in history from Cornell University. She is one of the founding scholars of Black European Studies,…

“UW Public Lectures: Disability Justice: Centering Intersectionality and Liberation”
Joining another event in the ‘UW Public Lecture Series’ is Patty Berne, Cofounder and Executive Artistic Director of ‘Sins Invalid’, to discuss the importance of intersectionality in disability justice and the need to address how diverse systems of oppression reinforce each other. Ms. Berne’s work creates a framework and practice of disability justice, which centers…

UW Public Lectures: An Evening with Alice Wong
This is another event in the ‘UW Public Lecture Series’. Alice Wong will be remotely joining moderated converstation addressing topics important to her work in raising the visibility of disabled people. Alice Wong is a disabled activist, writer, media maker, and consultant. She is the founder and director of the Disability Visibility Project, an online…

RISE UP: Be the Domino
Join us at our 2nd annual Rise Up Conference. Spend the day with us as we tackle issues related to racial and social justice with empathy and respect to all.
Local Hero Spotlight
Members can nominate a local hero for recognition on their local LoveJustice.com city page!
Anyone and everyone can make an impact, and at LoveJustice we believe that they deserve to be recognized for their good, necessary work!
