act-ma.org

act-ma.org An email list and Facebook events page to discover events and reach other activists in the Greater Boston Area. Started in Nov. 2017.

There is a separate page for Ongoing Events. Our webpage has interesting local links. Our links page has information about similar events calendars in the area. Our Radio page lists interesting locally produced shows. There is also a history of act-ma including it's predecessor the "Peace and Justice Events Hotline"

Here is the Mobilize link for the voting rights solidarity standout on Saturday. Co-sponsors so far are Activist Evening...
05/14/2026

Here is the Mobilize link for the voting rights solidarity standout on Saturday. Co-sponsors so far are Activist Evenings and APIs CAN. Hope you can join us and at the very least, push this out to your networks!

The voting rights our parents and grandparents marched and fought for are being dismantled — right now, state by state. On May 16, thousands are converging on Montgomery, Alabama for the **National Day of Action for Voting Rights.** Let's show up in solidarity with our southern siblings. Please jo...

If you missed the Boston launch party, you can check out the Lynn one! Join the movement to uplift the voices and needs ...
05/12/2026

If you missed the Boston launch party, you can check out the Lynn one! Join the movement to uplift the voices and needs of working people—we have to do the deep organizing work needed to truly build multiracial working class power and win the Working Families Guarantee:
https://workingfamilies.org/guarantee/

Cole Harrison writesThe Sunday Globe Magazine will feature a hit piece on Cambridge born activist Calla Walsh (https://w...
05/09/2026

Cole Harrison writes

The Sunday Globe Magazine will feature a hit piece on Cambridge born activist Calla Walsh (https://www.bostonglobe.com/2026/05/05/magazine/calla-walsh-markeyverse-iran/).

I encourage lots of us to write in with criticisms of this piece of lousy journalism.

MAPA is a peace group and doesn't support armed struggle. But activists who offer verbal support for armed struggle are not the problem. Genocide, US wars, the US hegemonistic foreign policy, and journalism that tries every way it can to avoid the subject, are.

My letter is below.

Cole
---
Cole Harrison Unsubscribe

May 8, 2026, 10:58 AM (23 hours ago)


to MAPA, Stop, MAPA
The Sunday Globe Magazine will feature a hit piece on Cambridge born activist Calla Walsh (https://www.bostonglobe.com/2026/05/05/magazine/calla-walsh-markeyverse-iran/), also attached here as a PDF.

I encourage lots of us to write in with criticisms of this piece of lousy journalism.

MAPA is a peace group and doesn't support armed struggle. But activists who offer verbal support for armed struggle are not the problem. Genocide, US wars, the US hegemonistic foreign policy, and journalism that tries every way it can to avoid the subject, are.

My letter is below.

Cole

---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Cole Harrison
Date: Fri, May 8, 2026 at 10:51 AM
Subject: Letter on Calla Walsh story
To: Letters

The far-right "City Journal" last fall posted a hit piece on Cambridge born activist Calla Walsh (https://buff.ly/4YNlW7).

This weekend's Globe Magazine features a rewrite of the hit piece by Sam Brodey ("Calla Walsh was a rising political star. She's a mouthpiece for Iran now.")

Brodey doesn't address the Gaza genocide, supplied and funded by President Biden and the Democratic Congressional majority (and editorially supported by the Boston Globe); the unprovoked and illegal US attacks on Iran last summer and this year; or the US starvation blockade of Cuba.

Brodey doesn't seem to recall that the Democratic Party shut pro-Palestine activists out of the 2024 convention and nominated "Most Lethal Fighting Force" Kamala Harris without a primary.

Why would young activists leave the Democratic party?

Could it be because they are appalled by the rapacious US foreign policy and come to sympathize with the countries the US, under Democrats and Republicans alike, are attacking?

Could it be because US foreign policy is itself the problem?

Cole Harrison

___
Below is a link to Calla speaking at Community Church of Boston explaining her disillusion with main stream politics.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Gncmfk-XFzE&t=2209s

The Community Church of Boston: A Peace and Justice Congregation Since 1920http://www.communitychurchofboston.org/home/Just returned from the historic US-Cub...

What Harry Hom Dow teaches us about staying true to ourselvesBy Khari ThompsonAs Frederick Hom Dow bends down to brush o...
05/04/2026

What Harry Hom Dow teaches us about staying true to ourselves
By Khari Thompson

As Frederick Hom Dow bends down to brush off the flower residue and dust from the 1965 Freedom Plaza plaque that bears his father’s name, he points to the first of three Chinese characters, 譚金源, that sit next to the English words, “Harry Hom Dow.”

“譚” is the character for “Hom,” a symbol he also bears proudly on the hat he wears.

Hom, Fred explains, is the family name his grandfather, Hom Soon Dow, brought from China to Massachusetts, where Harry Hom Dow would be born in 1904. In China, the family name goes first and the given name second.

But the immigration officials Hom Soon Dow encountered didn’t honor the difference in naming conventions.

“When my grandfather came over … the immigration people, when they wrote up his papers, said, ‘Okay, you’re a Dow.’ My grandfather and my father said, ‘Okay, that’s fine. We’ll live with that for now.’ But they insisted—at every stage, every generation—you had to put the ‘Hom’ in there.”

That insistence on remembering their family name—of refusing to forget who they were and where they came from—is a central piece of a story that will soon see Fred honored for his commitment to education and civil rights at Embrace Honors Harry Hom Dow on May 21, alongside other heroes of the AANHPI community.

Harry himself grew up in Boston's South End during an era defined by the Chinese Exclusion Act of 1882 and the restrictive Immigration Act of 1924—legislation that established strict quotas on non-white immigrants and brought intense scrutiny on minority communities. So, he decided to do something to help. He took night classes at Suffolk Law School while working at the family laundry business during the day, finally becoming the first Chinese American admitted to the Massachusetts bar in 1929.

When asked by the Boston Globe what he planned to do with his new license, his answer was quick and to the point: "I'm going to work for the Chinese."

“He found work where he could do that, and that was immigration law,” Fred said of his father.

For years, Harry helped families navigate a system designed to keep them out. He also served as a captain in Army Intelligence during World War II and the Korean War, fighting for a country that didn’t want to accept people like him even as he sought to preserve their rights.

Eventually, the system hit back against him.

In 1958, one of Harry's clients was charged with smuggling undocumented immigrants, and Harry was indicted as part of the investigation. Though the charges were eventually dropped and his name cleared, his law practice didn’t survive the scandal, pushing Harry, Fred, and their family toward poverty.

But, despite the hardship, Harry’s outlook never changed.

“It’s an example of what you need to do after you've been injured, after things have been taken away from you,” Fred said. “My dad, instead of seeking retribution or getting back at people or being angry, he worked for the community. He helped build so many organizations that helped people with housing, health, and domestic violence. He just knew that we had to create security for our community.”

Rather than disappear, Harry stayed active. He became a pro bono lawyer for the Emergency Tenants Council, fighting displacement in a South End under siege from gentrification. He helped conceptualize the South End Community Health Center. He served on the boards of Greater Boston Legal Services, United South End Settlements, Casa Myrna Vasquez Shelter for Women, and the South Cove Community Health Center in Chinatown, among others. He worked alongside Mel King, Frieda Garcia, Byron Rushing, and Alex Rodriguez—architects of Boston's civil rights movement during its most contested years.

"Black and Brown communities provided the lessons, the strategies, the experience that helped the Chinese community move towards liberation," Fred says. "And it's those bridges that are so important to building resistance. When we learn from each other's communities, that's when we grow."

The cost of Harry's persecution was real and lasting. The family struggled financially for years after he lost the practice. But they remembered the lesson the struggle for the Hom name had taught them: family comes first—both the family you’re born with, and the family you choose.

Today, anti-immigrant sentiment, discriminatory travel bans, cruel immigration law enforcement, and the rollback of civil rights make following Harry Hom Dow’s example as important as ever.

If we want the democracy we say we do—the one he and others honored on the 1965 Freedom Plaza worked for—we must strive to meet the legacy our forebears have left for us. And we must remember that none of us can change the world alone.

"Relationships are what make our movement strong," Fred explained. "And those relationships are based on trust, and solidarity, and a recognition that there's been hurt. … And then moving out from there—to embrace that, and embrace it with love. Because that's how we will find the way."

05/04/2026
https://www.mobilize.us/john-lewis-actions/event/947888/
05/04/2026

https://www.mobilize.us/john-lewis-actions/event/947888/

This recent ruling, SCOTUS essentially authorized partisan gerrymandering to override Black voters' right to meaningful representation, erasing decades of progress in a single ruling. People fought, bled, and died for these protections. The Court has dismissed those sacrifices with the stroke of a p...

Let’s paint some Kindness Rocks!Date: Saturday May 9 2026Time: 1 PM to 4 30 PMLocation: Brewer Fountain at Boston Common...
05/04/2026

Let’s paint some Kindness Rocks!

Date: Saturday May 9 2026
Time: 1 PM to 4 30 PM
Location: Brewer Fountain at Boston Common (near the Park Street entrance).

Head over to the Brewer Fountain at Boston Common for an afternoon of art in the park. We are bringing everything needed to get creative including plenty of smooth stones and a full set of paint pens. There is no need to bring your own supplies or worry about messy cleanup. Just show up and start painting.

You can design a rock to brighten up your own space or create something special to leave as a surprise for a neighbor. It is an easy way to enjoy the spring weather while getting to know the people who live right around the corner. Whether you are an experienced artist or just looking for a low pressure activity for the kids, we would love to have you join us. To help us make sure we have enough rocks and pens for everyone please let us know you are coming.
https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSdYrLdVwUul7c-WlEvJW8V_20_T2gFK3KMnmiDc4zUMfUmMrw/viewform

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