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Skyglow and faith

There are some nights when for whatever reason we can't see the stars from where we are, but that doesn't make us doubt whether or...

Sunday, 15 February 2026

      Something that moved me, in a way that it should:

"An 18-year-old Black girl threw herself between a Nazi and a mob ready to kill him—and changed what it means to choose humanity over hate.

June 22, 1996. Ann Arbor, Michigan—a progressive college town that prided itself on diversity—became the unlikely stage for a Ku Klux Klan rally. Hundreds of protesters flooded the streets with a clear message: white supremacists were not welcome here.

Eighteen-year-old Keshia Thomas stood among them, her voice joining the chorus of resistance. Then someone with a megaphone spotted trouble: "There's a Klansman in the crowd!"

A middle-aged white man wearing a Confederate flag t-shirt and bearing an SS tattoo stood among the protesters. Whether he was actually a Klan member didn't matter to the crowd—his symbols said enough. He tried to run. The mob chased him down.

Wooden signs became weapons. Kicks rained down as he hit the ground. Voices screamed, "Kill the Nazi!" The crowd closed in, rage overtaking reason.

In that moment, something inside Keshia shifted. "When people are in a crowd, they're more likely to do things they would never do as individuals," she later explained. "Someone had to step out of the pack and say, 'This isn't right.'"

She didn't think. She didn't hesitate. She threw her body over the man who represented everything she stood against, using herself as a human shield against the blows meant for him.

"When they dropped him to the ground," Keshia remembered, "it felt like two angels had lifted my body up and laid me down."

Her action wasn't born from naivety. Keshia knew violence intimately. "I knew what it was like to be hurt. The many times that happened, I wish someone would have stood up for me," she said. But she also knew a deeper truth: "Violence is violence—nobody deserves to be hurt, especially not for an idea."

Student photographer Mark Brunner captured the moment that would become one of Life magazine's Photos of the Year. Looking at the image, he was struck by the profound reversal it represented: "She put herself at physical risk to protect someone who, in my opinion, would not have done the same for her. Who does that in this world?"

Keshia never heard from the man she saved. But months later, a young man approached her in a coffee shop. "I want to say thanks," he told her. When she asked why, his answer stopped her cold: "That was my dad."

Suddenly, everything clicked into sharper focus. "For the most part, people who hurt...they come from hurt. It is a cycle," Keshia reflected. "Let's say they had killed him or hurt him really bad. How does the son feel? Does he carry on the violence?"

Twenty years later, in a 2016 interview, Keshia shared the news that made her sacrifice truly matter: "The real accomplishment of all this to me is to know that his son and daughter don't share the same views. History didn't repeat itself. That's what gives me hope that the world can get better from generation to generation."

Some criticized her. Some sent death threats, angry that she "traded her race" to save a man who hated her. But Pulitzer Prize-winning commentator Leonard Pitts Jr. understood what she had done: "That some in Ann Arbor have been heard grumbling that she should have left the man to his fate only speaks of how far they have drifted from their own humanity. And of the crying need to get it back. Keshia's choice was to affirm what they have lost. Keshia's choice was human. Keshia's choice was hope."

Today, Keshia continues her quiet revolution through small acts of kindness. "It doesn't have to be a huge monumental act," she says. "It can come down to eye contact or a smile."

But on one hot summer day in 1996, when rage threatened to consume everyone, an 18-year-old girl showed us something we desperately needed to see: that breaking cycles of hatred matters more than feeding them. That protecting human dignity—even for those who would deny yours—is the bravest form of resistance.

That choosing humanity, especially when it's hardest, is how we change the world."

~~

      I admire her so much. This is what is right. 

      I am so grateful for this girl's example. I am grateful to her, and for the needed reflection it prompted in me. Even all these years later being the mirror to make me face something very ugly about myself now. Only now can I try to change it.

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