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The Remembrance ProjectMain MenuHannah Chapman Tripp01111dbea35e71b8ed66da5dc9acf615b2f41e03Gilbert Borrego86338e624720b29eabebdb422c586d4de553bb47
Remembrance Project
1media/background.jpgmedia/2016 Ofrenda.jpg2020-08-05T13:29:37-07:00Gilbert Borrego86338e624720b29eabebdb422c586d4de553bb473772611image_header2020-09-29T11:53:45-07:00Gilbert Borrego86338e624720b29eabebdb422c586d4de553bb47Across cultures, humans have developed a wide spectrum of practices to remember the passing of others. Almost every culture and religion have their own traditions of mourning and remembrance, such as New Orleans jazz funerals and the Day of the Dead observance popularized in Mexico. In the United States, funerals and even funeral parades are commonplace. One common feature of many of these traditions is that they are a public ceremonial way to deal with private grief. It is the transferring of private grieving into a shared community activity.With this in mind, UT Libraries staff have developed an interactive exhibit for the UT community to honor loved ones and colleagues, and to acknowledge the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the UT community and worldwide. We would like to invite members of the UT Community to share some remembrances of collages, friends and loved ones to honor their memory and to connect with others. Remembrance offerings are meant to be personal and individual, and can be inspired by the cultural traditions of you or the one you are honoring. We invite you to a
Through acknowledging our losses and sharing we hope to provide a communal space for working through the difficulty of grief and loss.