The oft-used saying one death a tragedy, a million a statistic plays on perception. In reality, a million deaths, particularly when unjust, equate to a million tragedies. But given the layer of separation in the comfort of our communities, cultures and homes, tragedy doesn’t fully sink in until a more tactile experience comes along—the shoes of Holocaust survivors or, in the case of the One Million Bones project, human bones rendered from clay. On First Friday last week, Clay Arts Vegas on Main Street displayed 8,000 bones—toes, ribs, femurs, vertebrae, jaws and fingers spread out carefully in a parking lot—all of which will be sent to Washington, D.C., for the One Million Bones project, designed to acknowledge the millions of lives lost to genocide and crises in Sudan, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Somalia and Burma. Every bone equals $1 designated (up to $500,000) for CARE, a humanitarian organization fighting poverty in Somalia and the Democratic Republic of Congo.
-
@HappyTummy_702 Instagrammer Suzy Hendrix explains how her home cooking took off
“I want to reiterate, I had zero cooking skills. My mom would try to teach me, and I had absolutely no interest. You’re not going ...
-
Literary tour guide: Vegas-based writer Noah Cicero takes his fans on a journey
“Compared to my Ohio life, people are more positive here, more responsive to literary things.”
-
HELP of Southern Nevada’s Kelly Robson has made homeless assistance a year-round mission
“We break down all the barriers that led them to become homeless, so they can become self-sufficient and sustain on their own.”
- Get More As We See It Stories



Previous Discussion: