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Urban Christian Veterans

Urban Christian Veterans

Written by: D. Allen Rose
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Urban Christian Veterans provides a safe place for Christian Veterans of Color to discuss the challenges we face in our daily lives. Being a person of color has its challenges. Being a Christian has its challenges. Being a veteran has its challenges. In addition, many of us suffer with PTSD as a result of things we experienced during our military service. All of those factors being combined makes for a unique, and sometimes very challenging life experience that is seldom talked about in public forums.© 2026 Urban Christian Veterans Hygiene & Healthy Living Psychology Psychology & Mental Health Social Sciences
Episodes
  • Unity In The Community Through A Veteran Lens
    Jun 3 2026

    Unity is one of those words everybody loves until you ask what it actually costs. We start with a blunt question: is unity in the Black community even possible today, especially when so many of us feel there’s no trusted leader to galvanize people the way Malcolm X and Dr. King once did? From a Christian veteran's perspective, we talk about why “famous” doesn’t equal “chosen,” how token representation can drain momentum, and why unity often shows up only after tragedy, then slips away when daily life resumes.

    We also dig into the machinery behind leadership, including the role of money, political strategy, and the sense that power structures pull strings long before ballots get counted. From there, the conversation widens to the African diaspora: colonial borders, tribal identity, and why Pan-African unity can sound powerful yet be hard to live out. We even run a provocative reparations thought experiment that asks what “justice” would mean in real assets, retirement contributions, resources, and cultural artifacts, not just slogans.

    Then we turn toward leverage and hope: economic power, boycotts, Black history that many of us were never taught, and the idea that education changes what we demand from every party and every institution. We also wrestle with the role of the church, the impact of integration on community economics, and the difference between unity and uniformity, which the military teaches so well. We close with a clear challenge to keep learning and to ground any real unity in shared values, shared mission, and faith.

    Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review if this conversation pushes your thinking. What do you believe unity would actually require?

    #Unity, #Blackveterans, #BlackCommunity

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    48 mins
  • Why Older Black Veterans Must Guide Youth
    May 15 2026

    A kid looks you in the eye and says he is only in school to eat. That single sentence forces a different kind of leadership, the kind that starts with survival and still refuses to give up on purpose. We sit down as Urban Christian Veterans and ask a question that can make people uncomfortable: do older Black veterans have a real obligation to advise younger generations, or is it simply a personal choice?

    We talk through what mentorship looks like when you are dealing with hunger, trauma, and low expectations, not just bad attitudes. We share stories from school outreach, alternative programs, and military life to show how guidance has to fit the moment. That means addressing needs first, using exposure to expand a young person’s imagination, and passing down tools many of us never got early like investing basics, ETFs, and how generational planning can change a family’s future.

    We also break down practical leadership frameworks, including “Be Do Have,” and the importance of setting the tone in workplaces and community spaces with clear standards and disciplined language. Faith is not an accessory here; we wrestle with the idea that our experiences are meant to be shared and that obedience sometimes looks like stepping into hard rooms with patience and humility.

    If you care about #Black_mentorship, #Christian_leadership, #veterans’ voices, and #Black_youth_development that is honest about the minefields, press play. Subscribe, share this with someone who mentors, and leave a review if it helps you. What is one lesson you wish an older vet had told you sooner?

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    1 hr and 14 mins
  • Purpose After The Uniform with Army veterans Reginald Adams and Gregory Henry
    Apr 23 2026

    The news feels louder than ever, but some of the most important questions are still quiet: Who benefits when we stay distracted, divided, and afraid? I sit down with Reggie Adams and Greg Henry for a wide-ranging, honest conversation that only Christian veterans of color can really deliver, moving from war headlines to personal calling without losing the thread of what real life looks like on the ground.

    We start with the Middle East conflict, shipping choke points, and why a few decisions overseas can show up fast as oil price spikes, higher insurance costs, and stress at the pump. From there we talk immigration policy, including the fear created by enforcement incentives, and why Haitian refugee protections matter far beyond one community when racial profiling is always waiting for a legal excuse. We also dig into government accountability, ethics, and the way “the long game” gets played through money, media, and weak enforcement.

    Then we slow down and go deeper: purpose, calling, and spiritual gifts. Purpose is the why God put you here, calling is what He’s asking of you in this season, and your gifts are how you’re equipped to do it. Along the way, we share military stories and leadership lessons that still shape our character today, plus a challenge to think beyond “get a good job” toward entrepreneurship, ownership, and building something that lasts.

    If you value veteran perspective, faith-centered leadership, and real talk about current events, follow Urban Christian Veterans Podcast, share this conversation with a friend, and leave a review. What part of the conversation challenged you most?

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    2 hrs and 3 mins
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