In 1988, Newton Mayor Theodore D. Mann looked at his city and saw it changing—new faces, new languages, and new faiths finding their footing in a community that, for most of its history, had looked quite different from them. His response was not a new policy or piece of legislation. It was a phone call. Then another. And another. 37 years later, the organization born from those phone calls—Newton’s Foundation for Racial, Ethnic, and Religious Ha…
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