mina raj

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A short walk’s distance from Bishop Arts District and Downtown Dallas lies one of Dallas’s most underrated streets: Jeff...
10/18/2021

A short walk’s distance from Bishop Arts District and Downtown Dallas lies one of Dallas’s most underrated streets: Jefferson Boulevard. The road boasts a rich heritage; Jefferson meets Adams, Polk, Tyler, Madison, and Van Buren in a testament to the area’s history. In the 1950’s, Downtown Dallas boomed, so the wealthy would cross the bridge into Oak Cliff and shop at Jefferson Boulevard. Over time, however, the allure of the street diminished, leaving many of the stores empty, so families, several of whom were Latino, bought the stores and started businesses. The area, revitalized by the Latino culture, started to boom.
Walking around the area today means entering a vibrant Latino neighborhood. At least a dozen Quinceañera dress stores line the street; the grocery stores boast rows of tortillas; and the majority of the signs use Spanish. To the unsuspecting eye, the street feels like a flourishing area whose progress slowed during the pandemic. In reality, however, the street has slowly started to degenerate for years. The City of Dallas remodeled a couple of streets south of Jefferson Boulevard, and small-family-owned businesses closed as a result. And, with the “successful” revitalization of the Bishop Arts District within half a mile of Jefferson Boulevard, it looks like city planners will try to gentrify Jefferson Boulevard next.
Landmarks like the Texas Theater and Top Ten Records will stay, but if small business owners cannot continue to pay for their shops, they will go out of business and be replaced by larger corporations. As more hispanic businesses leave, the "Eat-Shop-Explore" culture that Jefferson Boulevard's page boasts will convert into a transactional environment. Although the revitalization could mean the return of the 1950's purpose of Jefferson Boulevard, it would also require dozens of businesses to leave, drive up the prices in the neighborhood, and force countless families to find new homes, thus changing the culture of the neighborhood. Therefore, this - this photo essay, this year - is the last of Jefferson Boulevard as we know it.

Lady Macbeth and her husband
01/05/2021

Lady Macbeth and her husband

A Modern SuperheroSince the invention of the superhero in 1936, American society has been obsessed with the notion of a ...
07/31/2020

A Modern Superhero

Since the invention of the superhero in 1936, American society has been obsessed with the notion of a person with a special ability to do good. Typically appearing in comics, superheroes can do things that normal people cannot: make themselves invisible, teleport, fly, lift extremely heavy objects, run as fast as light. These shiny powers give superheroes a sense of otherness or better-ness, making it difficult for us to recognize when we come into contact with real-life superheroes. Superheroes like my mother, a working mom and my inspiration.

For the entirety of my life, my mom, a PMNR physician, has worked. And, for as long as I can remember, her hours have been long, routinely reaching 12-hour days, 5 (sometimes 6) days a week. She stands on her feet all day in heeled shoes, treats dozens of patients, performs countless injections, and rarely takes a break or complains. Then, she comes home “as tired as a dog” and still manages to be an amazing mother. She makes dinner for my brother and I every night, attends our sports games, and stays up to date on our lives and schoolwork. She is my biggest advocate, supports me daily, puts me above herself, and somehow always exhibits grace and a positive attitude. My mom is the hardest-working and most sincere person I know, and she is a modern-day superhero.

smiles and sunflowers!🌻🌻
07/15/2020

smiles and sunflowers!
🌻
🌻

yesterday’s peaceful march ended outside of city hall where individuals came forward and shared their stories with syste...
06/04/2020

yesterday’s peaceful march ended outside of city hall where individuals came forward and shared their stories with systemic racism and the movement. All of the stories conveyed similar messages: society needs to recognize that black lives do and always will matter. read parts of their amazing stories below:

slide 1: an immigrant reminds the crowd of nearly 1000 people that blacks have instigated all societal improvements in regards to minorities - the end of slavery, the end of segregation, voting rights.

slide 2: a young woman shares that when she was a 19 year-old mental health patient, the police pinned her down in her own front yard because she “looked like someone who they were looking for.”

slide 3: a teacher admits that he’s risking his job (the school district he works in is very anti-protesting) to be there and stand up for basic human rights.

slide 4: a veteran shares that he doesn’t want to raise his children in this society, so he’s here to make a change by using his voice.

slide 5: a teacher relates that her EIGHT YEAR OLD son asked her to be careful and make sure that she wasn’t shot when she came to the protest.

slide 6: a student shares a deep, heartfelt poem (most of the crowd teared up) that she wrote after finding out about george floyd’s death. her poem conveys the backlash white people face in trying to support the movement.

slide 7: a man says that he came to the protest from jail (he went to jail for peacefully protesting two days ago) because he knows that change needs to happen now.

slide 8: an elected leader confesses that he got himself elected into office to make change, but society still prevents him from creating the change that the movement needs.

slide 9: a teen thanks everyone for coming out to the protest, for being peaceful, and for caring.

slide 10: a woman shares that she’s “lost a lot of friends this week, friends that [she’s] known for years, because they didn’t come to the protest or post on social media because they were scared of showing that they care about the cause.”

@ City of Dallas - City Hall

more photos from saturday’s protest. these highlight both sides of the protest - both the people trying to exercise thei...
06/02/2020

more photos from saturday’s protest. these highlight both sides of the protest - both the people trying to exercise their first amendment rights and the police officers trying to protect their community.

slide 1: a police officer stands in the middle of the street to order cars away from the area. The police officers were trying to push the perimeter further to protect downtown dallas from anticipated looting.

slide 2: a brave man kicks an exploding tear gas can away from his fellow protestors to protect them from the stinging chemicals. this was one in a stream of tear gas cans thrown at protestors within minutes.

slide 3: people cover their face as they walk away from the already-spreading tear gas. part of this tear gas got in my eye as i photographed this, and it STUNG.

slide 4: a swat team orders people to move away from the area. moments later, a rubber bullet was shot into the crowd (although we didn’t know it was rubber - the crowd sprinted so fast).

slide 5: dallas police officers standing together, as part of the perimeter.

@ Dallas, Texas

happy saturday! hope y’all enjoy these flowers!🌸🌼🌺🌻                 @ Southern Methodist University
05/23/2020

happy saturday! hope y’all enjoy these flowers!
🌸
🌼
🌺
🌻 @ Southern Methodist University

in kyoto, tourists often travel the river in wooden boats rowed by workers             @ Kyoto, Japan
05/09/2020

in kyoto, tourists often travel the river in wooden boats rowed by workers
@ Kyoto, Japan

i made my own recipe! i challenge you to a bake off... you have 24 hours to respond
05/04/2020

i made my own recipe!
i challenge you to a bake off... you have 24 hours to respond

missing the matterhorn a lil extra today during quarantine                @ Zermatt, Switzerland
03/26/2020

missing the matterhorn a lil extra today during quarantine
@ Zermatt, Switzerland

i watched this hard worker sweep the streets of chinatown, removing the layer of dirt, grime, and litter that had accumu...
03/06/2020

i watched this hard worker sweep the streets of chinatown, removing the layer of dirt, grime, and litter that had accumulated over the day. such tedious work. then, without exchanging a single word with any of the hundreds of tourists wandering around, she emptied her trash into another bin, loaded her makeshift trolley, and disappeared into the night.

as the coronavirus outbreak nears the two month mark, i see more and more people wearing masks like the ones i saw in to...
02/25/2020

as the coronavirus outbreak nears the two month mark, i see more and more people wearing masks like the ones i saw in tokyo last summer😷

@ Tokyo, Japan

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