Life After Hate
Life After Hate is a nonprofit organization founded in 2011 by Arno Michaelis, Sammy Rangel, Angela King, Christian Picciolini, Tony McAleer, and Frank Meeink. Its stated mission is to "build a safer society by making it possible for people to break free from lives of violent hate and extremism through evidence-based interventions.” In January 2017, the Obama administration awarded the group $400,000 as part of a grant from the Department of Homeland Security Countering Violent Extremism Task Force. However, DHS advisor Katharine Gorka and other aides of President Donald Trump decided to discontinue the grant in June 2017. A crowdfunding campaign established after the 2017 Charlottesville Unite the Right rally has raised $429,500 to go towards the organization.
History
Life After Hate was founded in 2011 by Angela King, Frankie Meeink, Arno Michaelis, Antony McAleer, Sammy Rangel, and Christian Picciolini. The organization was named after an online blog entitled "Life After Hate," created by Michaelis.From the age of 17, Arno Michaelis was deeply involved in the white power movement. In 2007, Michaelis began writing a memoir and co-founded the online magazine Life After Hate.
Angela King is one of the organization's co-founders, is currently its Director of Special Projects, and is the only co-founder employed by Life After Hate. King is an ex-white supremacist who struggled to forgive herself after being a Neo-Nazi. King was raised in Southern Florida by parents she describes as racist and homophobic. King joined hate groups in her early teens after being bullied throughout school and dealing with tensions at home. She found people welcomed her aggressive and violent tendencies. After eight years of being involved with extremist groups, she was imprisoned. In 1997, she was involved in a robbery of an adult video store. After fleeing to Chicago, Illinois, she returned to Florida, where she was arrested and incarcerated at the Federal Detention Center in Miami. She was originally sentenced to seventy months but was eventually granted a reduced sentence for her cooperation.
During her sentence, King met women who held her accountable for her beliefs but ultimately disarmed her aggression with compassion, which began the process of disengagement. King was released in 2001, determined to begin a new life. She completed three degrees, culminating in an M.A. in Issues of Social Concern, and graduated from the University of Central Florida. The University's literary magazine, Pegasus, interviewed her years later to explore her experiences and life's work.