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Sunday, June 21, 2020

Remembering my father who died before he could accept his gay son

I’ll never forget the first time I realized my father’s love for me might be conditional. I was a junior at Morehouse College in Atlanta, Georgia, and I had just come out as gay to him over the phone.

In a perfect world, my dad would’ve told me he loved me no matter who I loved and, maybe more naively, I hoped that he would tell me that being gay was OK. 

Unfortunately, neither of those things happened. To say that my father, an ordained Baptist minister, didn’t take the news well is an understatement. He called me incessantly every day thereafter from our Brooklyn family home to read me scriptures on what the Bible says about homosexuality.

READ MORE: Billy Porter speaks up for Black LGBTQ: ‘Our lives matter too’

When he learned that I was dating a man in Atlanta, he gave me an impossible ultimatum: end my relationship with my then-boyfriend and essentially become a born again, straight man all with the snap of a finger (if only it was that simple). And if I didn’t, my father said, he would cut me off financially. 

“Let whoever you’re with take care of you,” he said. He called it tough love. 

It was incredibly heartbreaking and terrifying to make sense of my dad’s rejection and, at just 19, the possibility of being on my own and supporting myself took me to places of sadness and fear that was both familiar and uncharted. On one end I was concerned about my livelihood. Would I have to drop out of college? Would I ever be able to take care of myself?

Gerren Keith Gaynor (far right) with friends on the campus of Morehouse College. (Photo: Courtesy of Gerren Keith Gaynor)

And on the other end, I internalized my father’s rejection of what was technically only a part of me (my sexuality), and yet somehow it felt like he had rejected all of me. I had played out many scenarios in my head of how my father would react the day I’d finally tell him my truth.

As I’m sure many Black LGBTQ children can relate to, my greatest fear was to become another queer youth kicked out of the nest and left to fend for themselves in an already cruel and scary world where being anything but white and straight felt like a death sentence in America.

Sadly, twelve years after my coming out story, only 12 percent of Black lesbian, gay, bisexual and queer youth are out to their parents, according to a 2019 study by the Human Rights Campaign.

And those brave enough to come out are often faced with not only the rejection but homelessness. What’s more, as is pointed out by The Trevor Project, “being Black in the United States has its own unique experiences coupled with its own specific challenges, and very little is known about how to address the needs of Black LGBTQ youth. Research has documented a variety of challenges faced by Black youth, including post-traumatic stress disorder, depression, and anxiety.”

(Photo: Adobe Stock)

As an act of survival, I chose to stand down. I went against what was in my heart, which was to fully step into my authentic self for the very first time in my life, and instead, I begrudgingly made the decision to go back inside the closet. It was safer that way. 

I continued to be the model son that my dad knew me to be. I excelled in my academics, pursued an early career in campus journalism, and whenever a family member made an awkward comment about whether or not I was dating anyone, I’d mysteriously smile and chuckle without saying a word like the rehearsed closeted gay man I was. 

READ MORE: J. August Richards on coming out as gay on Instagram: ‘I told my truth’

I wish I could say that there’s a happy ending; that eventually my father came around and accepted me as gay. But the truth is my father died two years later and we never got the chance to resolve what would ultimately become an unspoken wound in our relationship.

Anyone who identifies as gay, bisexual, trans, or queer can relate to the loneliness that comes with knowing who you are and not being able to share that fullness and authenticity with the ones you love most. My father died before he got the chance to know the fullness of who his son was. He also died before seeing who his son would ultimately become. 

Gerren Keith Gaynor at his father’s gravesite. (Photo: Courtesy of Gerren Keith Gaynor)

That reality is deeply painful. It’s for that very reason why Father’s Day is always a difficult day for me. Not just because of who I lost, but what I lost: the chance to be fully seen, loved and accepted as I am by the man who both created and nurtured me. 

In many ways, I feel robbed of an opportunity to heal my somewhat broken relationship with my father. It’s a very complicated love story that has led me to nearly two years of therapy (and counting) to unpack the seen and unseen traumas of being a Black queer boy reared in a Black, conservative Christian household. 

To be clear, I grew up in a beautiful and loving home. My father and mother were married for nearly 30 years before he passed, and my parents, who worked city jobs in New York City, did everything in their power to give me and my autistic brother the best that life had to offer. My father sacrificed his body and ultimately his health as he worked overtime nearly every day as an MTA transit worker to get me through private school and eventually college. 

In fact, he rarely ever stopped working. Until, of course, he came down with what was thought to be a cold but was actually congestive heart failure. It would ultimately take his life just days after he turned 60.

My father’s death, and by extension Father’s Day, bring up complicated feelings for me. I was blessed enough to have a father who was active in my life, in fact, I felt at times he was a bit too involved. He knew my semester schedule by heart and would call me in between classes to talk about nothing at all. Something that once felt smothering is the very thing I yearn to have just one more time. 

I’d be lying if I said that I was completely healed from the loss of my father and the chance for him to accept me, but I find comfort in knowing that the love we shared was real, no matter how messy and complicated it may have been. 

The truth is I’m still reconciling with the fact that I’ll never get to experience my father’s acceptance. He’ll never get to say sorry for the pain he caused me, and I’ll never get the chance to forgive him for it. But while some things were left unsaid, in my heart I believe my dad would’ve come around to accept his gay son. 

In the two months of being back home from college, my dad and I began to bond on another level, not just as father and son, but as two individual men. He was just starting to finally see me as my own person. It became less about what he wanted for my life and more about his curiosity for what I wanted for my life and where it was headed.

The night before he died, my father came into my room for what would be our very last conversation together. I was soon to begin my graduate studies at Columbia University, and he was very excited that his son was attending an Ivy League. 

“What do you hope this will do for your career?” he asked me. As I laid out my 10-year plan, I remember him smiling as his face beamed with pride. It was the same pride on his face when I graduated from Morehouse. Seeing his Black son, a first-generation college graduate, accomplish what he and his ancestors never had the privilege of doing was deeply gratifying for him.

Gerren Keith Gaynor with his father on his graduation day at Morehouse College in 2011. (Photo: Courtesy of Gerren Keith Gaynor)

In fact, aside from the day he dropped me off on campus, my graduation was the only time I ever saw my father cry. I can still see the love enveloped in his tears as I looked him in his eyes before he embraced me.

“You make me so proud,” he said during that final late-night chat in my room. “Seeing you graduate was the happiest day of my life after the birth of my four children.”

Looking back on it, there was nothing conditional about my father’s love. And while he never explicitly accepted me as gay, he didn’t have to. I know now that there was nothing that would’ve stopped my father from loving me. 

My relationship with my dad may have been complex but it was never absent of love. I hold on to that love on this Father’s Day, reminded that while he may no longer be with me in the physical sense, his loving spirit remains and comforts me when I need him most.


Gerren Keith Gaynor is the Managing Editor at theGrio and co-host of the Dear Culture Podcast. The Brooklyn native is a graduate of Morehouse College and Columbia School of Journalism. Previously, he served as an editor at Fox News, BET and Vibe magazine. Follow him on Instagram and Twitter @MrGerrenalist.

 

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K-Pop fans, TikTok users claim credit for low turnout at Trump Tulsa rally

President Donald Trump was expecting a capacity crowd in Tulsa, Oklahoma for his first campaign rally since the coronavirus pandemic shut down the country.

That capacity crowd, however, failed to materialize as swaths of seats and parts of the main floor at the 19,000-seat BOK Center remained empty.

Turns out, part of the reason for the Trump campaign’s overzealous projections can be blamed on another kind of campaign that started by TikTok users and fans of Korean pop, or K-pop, groups, The New York Times reports.

A supporter sits in the upper seats during a campaign rally for U.S. President Donald Trump at the BOK Center, June 20, 2020 in Tulsa, Oklahoma. (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)

Brad Parscale, the president’s reelection campaign chairman, touted the fact that 1 million people requested tickets to the MAGA rally. That figure was inflated by K-pop fan Twitter pages that urged their followers to apply for free tickets online and not show up.

READ MORE: Tulsa mayor sets curfew ahead of Trump rally fearing unrest

TikTok users then followed suit in registering to the event.

Given the low attendance, a planned address by Trump on an outdoor stage for a nonexistent overflow crowd was canceled.

As reported by The USA Today, one TikTok user, Mary Jo Laupp, 51, the self-proclaimed #TikTokGrandma, was one of the first to adopt the tactic. She released a TikTok video expressing her disdain of the president’s decision to hold his rally on Juneteenth at the site of the Black Wall Street massacre.

Supporters of U.S. President Donald Trump react as he concludes speaking at a campaign rally at the BOK Center, June 20, 2020 in Tulsa, Oklahoma. (Photo by Win McNamee/Getty Images)

Laupp called it “a slap to the face of the Black community” in her video. She explained that those who register will get two free tickets per cell phone, and called for viewers to do so to leave the rally sparsely attended.

@maryjolaupp

Did you know you can make sure there are empty seats at Trump’s rally? BLM.

♬ original sound – maryjolaupp

“I recommend that all of those of us who want to see this 19,000-seat auditorium barely filled or completely empty, go reserve tickets now and leave him standing completely alone on the stage,” Laupp said in her video.

READ MORE: Why Trump’s rally in Tulsa invokes the horror of the ‘Red Summer’ for Blacks

YouTuber Elijah Daniel, 26, stated that many of the participants in the stunt deleted their posts within 48 hours as an effort to keep it a secret.

“The majority of people who made them deleted them after the first day because we didn’t want the Trump campaign to catch wind,” Daniel told the Times.

Official attendance numbers have yet to be disclosed.

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Minority corrections officers barred from guarding Derek Chauvin file discrimination claims

Several correctional officers of color at a Minnesota county jail reported that they were barred from guarding prisoner Derek Chauvin, the former Minneapolis police officer charged with murdering George Floyd.

The eight staffers at Adult Detention Center in St. Paul, Minnesota, where Chauvin is being held, filed discrimination charges with the state, according to the Star Tribune.

The officers stated in the complaint that they were sent to a separate floor upon Chauvin’s arrival to the Ramsey County jail. Superintendent Steve Lydon, who oversees day-to-day operations at the state’s second-largest pretrial detention facility, told them their presence could potentially be a “liability,” due to their race, the claims allege.

The complaint, citing racial discrimination, was filed with Minnesota’s Department of Human Rights.

READ MORE: Benjamin Crump: Floyd family to file civil suit against killer cop Derek Chauvin

One of the acting sergeants, who is Black, stated that he “understood that the decision to segregate us had been made because we could not be trusted to carry out our work responsibilities professionally around the high-profile inmate — solely because of the color of our skin. I am not aware of a similar situation where white officers were segregated from an inmate.”

In one complaint, a Black acting sergeant who handles the transport of high-profile detainees was ordered substituted by white officers in the middle of a routine pat-down of Chauvin, the newspaper reports. The complaint sites Lydon as the offender.

George Floyd (Credit: Floyd family)

The supervisor told investigators that the decision to swap the correctional officers was made to “protect and support” the minority officers upon learning of Chauvin’s imminent arrival to the jail.

“Out of care and concern, and without the comfort of time, I made a decision to limit exposure to employees of color to a murder suspect who could potentially aggravate those feelings,” Lydon explained.

The superintendent has been demoted.

READ MORE: All four ex-cops in George Floyd death charged and officially in custody

The attorney for the eight officers, Bonnie Smith, said that such decisions in the future must not be based on race or color.

“I think they deserve to have employment decisions made based on performance and behavior,” Smith stated. “Their main goal is to make sure this never happens again.”

Chauvin first arrived at Ramsey County jail on May 29. He was booked for third-degree murder and manslaughter charges, stemming from kneeling on Floyd’s neck for nearly nine minutes. The charges have since been increased to second-degree murder.

Three other ex-Minneapolis cops involved in the deadly arrest attempt of Floyd, who was a 47-year-old father, have also been charged in his homicide.

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DL Hughley tests positive for COVID-19 after collapsing at comedy club

D.L. Hughley on Saturday revealed that he tested positive for COVID-19, one day after he suddenly collapsed on stage at a Nashville comedy club.

Hughley, 57, took to his Twitter page to address his fans about the frightening incident. The comic was mid-joke on Friday when he began slurring his speech and subsequently fainted while three men came to his assistance. Zanies Nashville Comedy Club was hosting him for a four-day set.

During treatment at Saint Thomas West Hospital, it was determined that he contracted the coronavirus.

In a video posted to his Twitter page, Hughley stated that his fall was most likely the result of “extreme exhaustion and dehydration.” However, doctors performed “a battery of tests,” he said, during which he discovered he had contracted the virus that has grasped the world.

“I also tested positive for COVID-19, which blew me away,” he explained. “I was what they called asymptomatic. I didn’t have any symptoms.”

 

Some of the known symptoms of COVID-19 include fever, cough, loss of smell, difficulty breathing, sore throat and fatigue, among other signs.

READ MORE: AMC to require face masks in theaters after backlash

“Apparently, I just lost consciousness,” quipped Hughley, who hosts the nationally syndicated “The DL Hughley Show.” “In addition to all the other stuff you have to look out for, if your ass pass out in the middle of a show, on stage, you probably need to get tested.”

More than 8.8 million people around the globe have tested positive for COVID-19, the disease caused by a coronavirus outbreak that was first discovered in the Chinese city of Wuhan in December. More than 2.2. million people in the United States have tested positive for the virus and about 119,700 have died of complications as of Sunday morning, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University.

Hughley also thanked all the fans for their prayers and well wishes upon hearing the initial news of his collapse.

“To you comedians who called and said such evil things when I was scared to death, thank you, too,” he said with a chuckle.

“Thank you for your prayers and your well wishes, and a few more of them wouldn’t hurt,” he said to his followers.

READ MORE: New York City to begin phase 2 of reopening amid virus 

Friday, June 19, was the second night of Hughley’s four-night run at Zanies Nashville. Video of the incident by a fan went viral. According to Fox News, it was his manager who caught him as his body went limp on stage to the sold-out audience. Two additional men came to his aide before he was taken to the hospital.

Hughley stated in his video that he will be quarantining in his Nashville hotel for the next 14 days.

The Associated Press confirmed that his remaining sets at Zanies Nashville have been canceled. Hughley also had scheduled appearance in Huntsville, Alabama and Pittsburg, Pennsylvania, as shown on his Facebook page.

The comedy club had reopened for business on May 15, according to The Tennessean. The phase 3 reopening for the city of Nashville from coronavirus lockdown starts Monday.

Have you subscribed to theGrio’s new podcast “Dear Culture”? Download our newest episodes now!

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What I learned about grief on my first Father’s Day as an angel parent

A year ago, I joked with my pregnant wife about picking out my first Father’s Day card. Clowning her, I told her I wasn’t a corny daddy and that my card better have “The Sauce.” I cherish this memory, documented on Instagram because it’s coupled with laughter that might not have otherwise come for me this Father’s Day.

As I process my own grief, I’m aware that there is also inescapable collective grief happening around me, and that reality is further complicated by being Black in America. We’ve seen COVID-19 cause the mortality rate to skyrocket, all while disproportionately affecting the conditional living of Black Lives. And as we try to come to terms with the gravity of that matter, we witnessed yet again, more Black Lives being taken at the hands of state-sanctioned violence.  

READ MORE: White supremacy takes so much from us already, don’t let it take your grief too

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@solaffirmations wouldn’t be… If it wasn’t for Kareem🖤 . . . Massive Love to all the people who’ve been supporting @solaffirmations!!! Thank you for helping me to share Kareem’s impact on my life. In fact it’s written on the back of of Every copy! . . Then to make the day even more impactful, after @fefemonique and I left the post office we ran into some young brothers who had beautiful energy. All I said was Peace King, and the rest was history. . . . Not only did I get the opportunity to fellowship and put books in their hand, but I also Got to tell them about my Big Brother Kareem and his impact on my life as it relates to @solaffirmations. Today makes 6 years to the date he passed … But I his Love is still with me.🖤 . . Even in my grief, God is the greatest. . . . #kamaiusmommyanddaddy #KareemsLittleBrother #SOLAffirmations . . Order you copy of @solaffirmations in the at the #LinkTree in my Bio

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I’m not sure if you can relate, but for me, it feels like there are two explosions happening,  simultaneously, in my proximity. One is happening in the world around me, and its aftershock is causing the other to happen inside of me (within). As my brain tries to make sense of it, I end up processing more information than I can handle, and by default, it feels like a processing error.

Not to mention the weight of processing the Black experience while being Black in America. It feels like a psycho-social crisis to which there is no reprieve. Political disagreements and judgment pollute our pathways of communication and dissension is widespread.

It’s seriously a lot to unpack. Since George Floyd’s death especially, I’ve experienced a lot of demonstration spaces that end up feeling more like grief processing spaces. But then again, admittedly, I know that I am hypersensitive to grief these days and it’s been this way for the last 9 months. 

On September 30, 2019, my wife and I became Angel Parents to a beautiful #BabyBaileyGirl named Kamaiu SOL. We experienced a radiant 41-week pregnancy in the seventh year of our marriage, and by this time, we’d been together 15 years. Our journey to becoming her parents brought about the deepest joy we have ever known. The excitement in our family was unmatched.

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Why must my arms feel so empty for what my heart still holds? . . This is one of my favorite photographs from our short time together. This is my family. My precious beautiful family. . . . We had just been discharged from the hospital and despite the heart break of going home empty handed we were excited that the morgue attendant told us we could come back and spend more time with our daughter. We asked if we could change her out of her hospital clothes and when we were told yes, we rushed home to pack her a change of clothes in her diaper bag. . . Although our daughter was already departed, we took great pride in being able to care for her body and change her diaper for the 1st time. Felicia and I worked as a team to get her dressed and then Felicia and the auntys took over when it was time to do her hair. 😂 . . . While they were finishing #BabyBaileyGirl's hair, I went to get @aoctaviusw from the front desk. I called him just moments before to ask him if he could meet me at the hospital to photograph my daughter and he was there in no time. . . The angel wings in the photograph were intended to be a part of her Halloween (hallelujah) 🙏🏽costume gifted by her aunty @wifey_atkins , but time had other plans. . . . . 📷 cred: @aoctaviusw Inside the Morgue at Highlands Hospital…. Man can’t believe how beautiful this is…. . . . #BabyBaileyGirlsParents #livinginthefrequencyoflove

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I was the last of my mother’s 8 children to bring forth a child and Felicia’s mothers’ last grandchild was 17 years prior. Throughout the entire pregnancy, we were adorned with love. Family and close friends came to help us nest and our mothers came to stay with us during the last few weeks of the pregnancy.

READ MORE: Too many pregnancy books don’t keep it real, author Nancy Redd says

I remember coming downstairs in the middle of the night and seeing them in prayer. That was their thing. Felicia and I are so blessed to have both of our mothers in our lives. But not even a praying mother could save us from the grief we would come to know. 

Our precious Baby Bailey Girl was born 6:19 a.m., and passed shortly after birth. As we entered the hospital that morning, we did so without any fear and distress. We were patient in awaiting her arrival and had every reason to believe that Kamaiu would be coming home with us and that we would be spending the rest of our lives with her. That’s what we planned for, that’s what we prepared for.

But instead we were given the journey of Angel Parents. It is a grief that has no reference and we are still learning how to do it each day. 

In my learning of what it means to be an Angel Parent, I had to learn an entirely new type of gentleness. I anticipated being gentle with my wife and daughter, but I had to learn how to be gentle with myself. I had to learn that experiencing grief didn’t mean that something was wrong with me and that my grief did not need to be fixed. I had to learn to be present with my grief, and I learned how to do that better when I came into the understanding that grief is love. 

But it’s often hard to grasp that understanding because grief is love after a loss and it’s the permanency of the loss that makes everything else disorienting. This loss allowed me to see that America is severely under-informed as a society on how to have conversations about grief, and for the most part, are uncomfortable around grief.

Our society loves the strong overcomer narrative because it’s easier to hold than grief is. Happiness is easier to get along with. Even as close friends grieve for our loss, they also grieved who we used to be and it takes time for them, too, to reconcile with their new reality. So, as they were doing their best to be gentle with us as we found our footing, we too, were learning to be gentle with people whose grief looked different than ours. Uniquely enough, it became an experience in radical gentleness that we all needed. 

I thank God grief didn’t take us out. Yes, it broke our hearts, but it also broke open a new dimension in our capacity to love. To hold the grief, we had to reconfigure our relationship, and that process molded us into a love we’ve never seen before. At the time, we had no clue how powerful this pivot would be, but having an increased capacity to love has been my saving grace in 2020, particularly in this COVID-19/Black uprising era.

When the world is offering noise, I remember who I have become and what I have learned since my Kamaiu SOL was born. Her first name means “silent warrior, one who loves relentlessly.” Her middle name means “Source of Light.” I try to show up with these competencies wherever I go. Especially wherever I see Black people, because we deserve to be loved relentlessly.

We deserve reminders to be gentle with ourselves. Especially when we have a country that insists on devaluing our humanity. It makes me angry enough to fight, but anger is a misleading emotion. So in turn, I use the grief I feel to inform my ability to fight with love. Because grief is love. And nothing is more powerful than love. 

Amidst marching, organizing, and lending my gifts to the movement of Black Liberation, Kamaiu SOL has been my greatest teacher. She has helped me learn how to create the conditions that alleviate our own suffering. She has helped me to create a work that encourages us to take inventory of our own hearts and remove the things occupying love’s territory.

With her relentless love, my wife and I created a toolkit that offers daily gentle reminders that help to develop new habits of mind. This toolkit, affectionately named SOL Affirmations, was previously only available by book. However, during our pregnancy with Kamaiu, we started to record the SOL Affirmations album in hopes that, one day, our students and their families could experience it together.

But “one day” wasn’t going to come fast enough for the times we are living in. The more we learned about our grief, the easier it was for us to see that the world around us was grieving, too. So today, here is a cherished gift from Kamaiu, Karega, and Felicia. On this Father’s Day of 2020, we present SOL Affirmations volume 1.


Karega Bailey is an angel parent, a social-emotional healing practitioner, and an award-winning educator and recording artist. He is a nationally renowned Peace Advocate and the Founding Dean of Culture of Roses in Concrete Community School in Oakland, CA. He is the author of SOL Affirmations and co-founder and lead facilitator for BE-Imaginative, a transformative safe space lead by a collective of artists and activists dedicated to disrupting gun violence and healing Black and Brown communities through innovative multi-dimensional storytelling.

 

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The post What I learned about grief on my first Father’s Day as an angel parent appeared first on TheGrio.



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European Football Clubs Are Turning to AI for an Assist

Software company Acronis has been storing the data of the best and brightest teams. Now, it wants to use that to help them win games.

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Zimbabwe anti-corruption body starts audit of the rich

The anti-corruption commission threatens to take people's assets if they cannot explain their origin.

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Designer George Sully Launches A Platform To Celebrate Black Designers of Canada

George Sully

Due to the protests over racial injustice and police brutality in the United States, conversations surrounding race relations have not only been occurring in America but on a global scale with different international cities also marching in solidarity. In Canada, one fashion designer is using the momentum to spotlight Black designers in his country that often don’t receive the praise they deserve.

George Sully has made a name for himself in the Canadian fashion world as a famous shoe designer and the co-founder of Sully Wong, House of Hayla, along with other trendy collaborations with various designers. Visitors can see some of his work in the Toronto Bata Show Museum and in the television show Star Trek: Discovery. In an interview with Fashion Magazine, he shared how he made the transition to fashion from working in the music industry.

“I was doing rap and producing songs, then I got into a lot of house and started DJing,” Sully told Fashion Magazine. “After the DJing took off, then I started saying, what’s next? And when I saw Diddy go from music to fashion and make that transition, I thought wow. I can make that transition.”

Now he’s launched a brand new platform dedicated to spotlighting Black Canadian designers called Black Designers of Canada, a unique interactive index of Black designers for consumers to discover. According to Fashion Magazine, Sully was inspired to create the platform because “for far too long the Black community has been marginalized when it comes to fashion and our contribution to it.”

“I wanted to create a platform where we can be found,” said Sully in a press statement “[Because] you didn’t know we ever existed in the first place.”



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First Black-Owned Supermarket to Sell Products From Mostly Black Farmers Raises $430K

Black Farmers

The founders of WeBuyBlack and the developers of the first ever Black-owned supermarket that will primarily sell products from Black farmers and other food manufacturers have reached their first financial goal of $425,000 to purchase the property! 13,881 people have contributed to the campaign so far, and the Atlanta-based store will be called Soul Food Market, and will be the first grocery store of it’s kind.

“We are super proud of our unity, and our team is even more inspired by our collective efforts to see this project come to fruition,” said CEO Shareef Abdul-Malik in an email to their supporters and contributors.


The company will continuing to raise funds for the renovation of the 20,000 square feet building, and then for the operations. Renovation requires another $350,000 and operating the building requires another $420,000 for a grand total of $1.2 million to fully complete the project.

Just what the community needs

After sampling 500 hundred families in the local Atlanta area where they plan to open the first grocery store, Shareef’s data showed that the average household spent $650 dollars a month for groceries. He comments, “With just 500 families, that’s over $3 million leaving our community each year. This campaign is not only to help keep our dollars in our community, but it’s also to provide our people with jobs.”

As previously reported, it will also help Black entrepreneurs because the selection of naturally grown vegetables and fruits will be sourced from Black farmers in Georgia. Other products produced by Black-owned brands, ranging from everyday necessities such as diapers and detergent to all natural household cleaning products, will stock the shelves! The goal ultimately is to become a nationwide chain.

To learn more about the project and/or to make a donation, visit https://ift.tt/2EUrFy8

This article was originally written by BlackBusiness.com.



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Best MacBooks (2020): Air vs. Pro, Which Model Should You Buy?

13-inch MacBook Pro or MacBook Air? Let us help you navigate Apple's laptop lineup.

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This 17-Year-Old Received 24 College Offers While Creating A Company Dedicated To Stopping Gun Violence

nigh school senior RuQuan Brown

The spread of COVID-19, or the novel coronavirus, may have led to the cancellation a lot of major milestones like graduation or prom for young people but the viral outbreak isn’t stopping them from still excelling academically. In the case of 17-year-old RuQuan “Ru” Brown, his mission was always clear—excel in school and get into college. Not only was he able to accomplish both, but he also managed to do it all while running his own company to help stop gun violence.

A high school senior, Brown currently has 24 college acceptances, seven of which are Ivy League institutions, and he earned 16 full-ride scholarships. His acceptances include Howard University, Georgetown University, Yale University, and Harvard University. In addition to holding a 3.9 GPA, he is also the student body president and a gifted athlete. Outside of academics, he runs Love1, a clothing company he uses to raise awareness about gun violence after losing teammates, friends, and family members to guns.

“My company is called Love1. I started it to honor the lives of my teammate and stepdad, who were murdered a year apart. I wanted to beat gun violence to the punch so that our families don’t have to continuously fall victim to tragic losses,” Brown told Because of Them We Can.

His company donates 20% of its proceeds to an organization in New Jersey called One Gun Gone, which buys guns from New Jersey communities and turns them into art. “We’re eliminating a small fragment of the problem in order to reduce the amount of our loved ones being taken from us,” he said. Brown credits his stepfather for instilling his values of hard work when he was younger.

My stepdad took me to my first ever football practice. He would have me do 100 pushups a night starting at age 7,” he said. “I never understood the importance of this until middle school when my body was physically mature compared to my male peers. He taught me the importance of working when nobody is watching. That is how you come out on top; doing the hard work in the dark.”



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Saturday, June 20, 2020

Baton Rouge activist blasts white school board member: ‘You don’t give a damn!’

In a video that has gone viral, a white school board member in Baton Rouge gets scolded by a Black activist who is fed up with her defending a high school being named after General Robert E. Lee — and apparently shopping online during a recent board meeting.

Connie Bernard, a member of the East Baton Rouge Parish School Board, had to apologize on Friday for defending the Confederate solider after getting called out by activist Gary Chambers.

Swearing to be part of the solution, Bernard essentially apologized for being a racist after she defended and voted in the past to uphold Lee’s namesake.

READ MORE: Robert E. Lee high school name change brings students to tears

On Thursday, a unanimous vote got passed to change the name of Robert E. Lee High School, which got shortened to Lee High after a similar backlash in 2016.

However, for Bernard, the decision was a tough one, considering she once said that parents and students triggered by the school’s name did not know their history.

“I would hope that they would learn a little bit more about General Lee, because General Lee inherited a large plantation and he was tasked with the job of doing something with those people who lived in bondage to that plantation, the slaves, and he freed them,” Bernard said.

On the contrary, people who opposed the name did know who General Lee was.

“When he got the plantation after he got off the field with 27,000 people dying at Gettysburg. Robert E Lee was a brutal slavemaster,” Chambers, the publisher of The Rouge Collection, a Black-owned, urban media platform in Baton Rouge. “Not only would he whoop the slaves, he said, ‘Lay it on ‘em hard.’ After he said that, he said, ‘Put brine on them.’”

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I told Connie Bernard to her face she needed to resign from the East Baton Rouge School board. • She was shopping while citizens were speaking about changing the name of Lee High. She was a school board member 4 years ago when they voted to keep Lee associated with the school. Then she chocked a teenager in his home in 2018, she should’ve resigned then. Then she got on TV last week telling Black folks we needed to learn more of Lee’s history. • When we don’t confront elected officials we give them permission to disrespect us and to devalue us. Connie needs to resign. I stand on that. If you think her actions are unacceptable send an email to the members of the board encouraging Connie to resign. • Speak truth to power, stand on your convictions, let NONE of them slide, and #KeepPushing. We got work to do. • I love US for real. We won the vote to change the name of Lee High, but the work continues until Connie is gone. • Email the board: dtatman@ebrschools.org, cbernard@ebrschools.org, mgaudet@ebrschools.org, jdyason@ebrschools.org, ewarejackson@ebrschools.org, dcollins1@ebrschools.org, thoward4@ebrschools.org, dlanus@ebrschools.org, mbellue@ebrschools.org.

A post shared by Gary Chambers (@garychambersjr) on

Bernard’s recounting of General Lee also came under fire from other board members, some of whom are Black.

“Under the demands of his late father’s will, which demanded he free all slaves after five years, Lee tried multiple times to resist and keep the slaves under his control, yet his name hangs over our school,” Dadrius Lanus. a Black board member, said.

“It was disturbing that a fellow board member would be so insensitive and say some inaccurate things about history that would just fan a flame,” Evelyn Ware-Jackson, a Black board member, said, according to The Advocate.

What made matters worse was when Chamber took a picture of Bernard while others expressed their desire to rename the school – it appears the white board member distracted with her shopping online.

“You don’t give a damn!,” Chamber said, but she claims it was a pop-up ad and she was not internet savvy to close in time, The Advocate reported.

“I wasn’t shopping,” Bernard said. “I was actually taking notes, paying attention, reading online comments.”

READ MORE: Texas school board member wore Venus, Serena Williams Blackface for Halloween

Chambers would call out Bernard for leaving the room once more critiques got directed at her. In her response, she left to use the restroom.

Bernard later wrote in a statement on Friday she was “deeply sorry” for leading people to think she is “an enemy of people of color.”

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