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Through Oct. 17 The Quilted Conscience: Dreams and Memories International Quilt Study Center & Museum, 33rd and Holdredge, Lincoln Reception Oct. 1, 5-7 p.m. w/ 5:30 p.m. panel discussion & screening FREE, 472.6549, quiltstudy.org The threads run deep in a story quilt made by 16 Sudanese-American girls from Grand Island, Neb. under the direction of Peggy Hartwell, a founder of the Women of Color Quilters Network. The girls express tribal stories and customs of their families’ homeland and of their adopted Nebraska home through symbol-rich quilt panels. Along with these cultural, social threads, the girls’ immigrant-assimilation stories are connected to a pair of legendary social workers from Grand Island, the Abbott sisters, whose trailblazing early 20th century work focused on immigrant issues-rights. John Sorensen ties it all together. He’s the driving force behind the Abbott Sisters Project, a sponsor of the quilt making with the Grand Island Public Schools and area quilters. Hear and meet Sorensen and some of the girls at a panel discussion and view his new NET documentary The Quilted Conscience.


Subscribe to The Reader Newsletter

Our awesome email newsletter briefing tells you everything you need to know about what’s going on in Omaha. Delivered to your inbox every day at 11:00am.

Become a Supporting Member

Subscribe to thereader.com and become a supporting member to keep locally owned news alive. We need to pay writers, so you can read even more. We won’t waste your time, our news will focus, as it always has, on the stories other media miss and a cultural community — from arts to foods to local independent business — that defines us. Please support your locally-owned news media by becoming a member today.

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