What’s Happening at Horace Mann??

 It has been a great and historical summer at the landmark Horace Mann building in our beloved Africatown-Central District!  Many people have been wondering what is going on so we thought it was important to share some highlights of the summer with you.

There is a diverse consortium of community based organizations and that have activated the space in amazing ways providing education enrichment, early childhood development and parent engagement, vocational training, mentoring programs, arts & music space, computer lab, great events and many other community development activities.

Currently the More 4 Mann Coalition is working with the Superintendent and school district, the city of Seattle and other stakeholders regarding maintaining continuity of these vital programs in Horace Mann building.

This Friday 8/23 will be the second to last installment of Movies Under the Moonlight at Mann starting after dusk.  Bring a blanket the family and come enjoy! Popcorn and snacks provided.

 

More 4 Mann report to community

&

SUMMER PROGRAMMING 

 

Africatown Village Children’s Collective

(Mon-Thurs 11am-5:30 pm)

A Family Collective taking the responsibility of our children and the future of our community into our own hands. “It takes a village to raise a child.” The Village collective employs an African-centered educational approach focused on cultural competency, self-narration, and creating an environment which centralizes our humanity. This is a parent-led, community-supported collaboration and we as parents and community members have the first responsibility for the education and development of our children. Parents are expected to contribute time, energy, and resources to the process.

 

 

Al-Noor Academy of Arts & Sciences Summer Programs for Girls 

Mon-Thurs, 9am-2pm

Al-Noor Academy of Arts and Sciences is a middle school summer enrichment program providing a safe culturally relevant space for muslim girls. Al-Noor in Arabic translates to “The Light”. Our intials, ANAAS, also in Arabic translate to “humankind”. ANAAS cherishes the light in all girls for their benefit and for humankind. We offer a 6 week comprehensive program which offers four classes to girls ages 10-14:

  • Math+(hem+addicts)=mathematics! an art based approach to math studies,
  • Human Lights and Rights, an exploration of social justice through the humanities,
  • Conversational Arabic, and
  • Livin the Life Skills, a place to explore skills such as money managment, media awareness, conflict management, professional exposure, and more.

 

 

Photography/Video Studio Mon & Wed 5pm-6:30pm

 

It’s time to bring your stories to life with images and motion picture! This video production course focuses on learning the basics of photography & video production, including camera work, lighting, sound, editing and distribution. Works will be showcased on UPC-TV and a DVD will be put together showcasing the skills of the class.

 

 

Image Is Everything:

Tue & Thur 3pm-5pm

Image Is Everything promotes positive self images and esteem to young women while exposing them to careers in the fashion industry. Participants are introduced to the fashion and merchandising industry including design, sourcing, manufacturing, retail and wholesale distribution.  Students learn about small business entrepreneurship through engagement with clothing designers and retailers and other industry professionals.

 

 

Young Geniuses Summer Camp

Mon-Fr. 12pm-5pm

Provides youth with academic and cultural enrichment, leadership skills and a positive peer group.  Activities include, life skills, leadership development, urban gardening, swimming, music, media production and more.

 

Seattle Amistad School Summer Camps

 

Seattle Amistad School is an independent, two-way (Spanish/English) immersion school serving grades pre-K-5. At the Seattle Amistad School, native English speakers, native Spanish speakers, and bilingual students learn together in a bilingual, bicultural environment. Students participate in a dynamic academic program, while developing full proficiency and literacy in both Spanish and English. For more information or to register, please call us at 206-325-3172, or email us at [email protected].

 

 Soul Speak Creative Writing Workshops

 Tues & Thurs 1pm-3pm

SistaSoulSpeak gives youth and young adults an opportunity to discover, express & develop their inner & outer beauty through creative writing in the different artistic forms of Poetry/Spoken Word, Song Writing/Recording, Literature (Non-Fiction/Fiction)/Self-Publishing, Videography/Filmmaking and Journalism among many other forms in which creative is used as a tool. SS Co-Ed is a great release and pick-me-up for young any young person who may be experiencing things in life which causes them unneeded/wanted stress. Participants will have the opportunity to record, perform and or publish their work. For more information, please feel free to contact with your name telephone number and way to respond for you. Nicquitta KHMET Brooks at: [email protected].

 


Urban Mix 101

presented by Itech Solutions

Tues & Thurs 3-6pm

An intense course on the fundamentals of Digital Audio Recording and Music production. This course is the first in a series related to the comprehensive understanding of digital recording processes and software.  Students are familiarized with the Protools(DigiDesign) work environment as well as the Reasons(Propellorhead) workspace. Students are introduced to an analog mixing console and shown how the digital and analog systems correlate in a typical recording environment. Course work includes: how to connect a microphone in a series chain with effects (VST) modules, using compression, inserts on vocals and instruments, working with auxiliary/send tracks etc.  Students learn to create a unified mix on CD with both vocals and instrumentation by the course’s end. The class is designed for youth between the ages of 13 – 17 call for exceptions or specialized recording rates and/or Individualized instruction for specific recording projects. CLASS meets 2 days weekly (Tu-TH 3-6) for three (3) consequentive weeks with a walk-in tutoring lab on Saturdays. 

 

 

Teen Advancement Program

Wed. 6:30-8pm, Sat. 2-5pm

Teen Advancement Program (TAP) focuses on developing and enhancing urban youth’s critical thinking skills through creative learning, reading comprehension, environmental literacy, and mentoring using culturally relevant issues to promote positive solutions for success. We encourage the support of parents, friends, relatives, and community members who understand the urgency of targeting the thought process of our youth. We will help our youth “TAP” into their greatness!  Program Directors are Solomon and Curtis Calhoun, both of whom are community organizers striving to better our future by positively influencing the next generation.

 

 

Raise The Bar Fitness

Wednesdays 3pm-5pm

Aligned with First Lady Michelle Obama’s Let’s Move campaign to to combat childhood obesity, the Raise The Bar Fitness Initiative promotes healthy lifestyle choices to young adults influenced by hip-hop music and culture. The program incorporates a variety of physical fitness techniques including the acclaimed Bar-Tendaz program, an innovative fitness initiative based on kinesthetic aerobics in the pursuit of healthy living.

 

 DANCE & MOVEMENT STUDIO

 

African Dance & Fitness Health Class presented Sista Soul Speak

6:30-8:30pm/Wed 1-3pm

Taking the best of the best forms of African Dance and incorporating them into as exercise aerobics regimen which consists of the four types of exercise:

  • Balance & Coordination
  • Cardiovascular – which improves endurance & stamina
  • Strength/Resistance-which improves muscle and bone strength
  • Flexibility-which improves joint and muscle flexibility

Classes start with a thorough warm up, followed by choreography that is broken down section by section, focusing on technique, execution and comprehension of the drum rhythms. For health & spiritual exercise our Sis. Emily DeAngel will teach the Kundalini dance with African Soukous Music, utilizing a warm up based on each chakra; incorporating new and traditional steps into a simple empowering choreography. We also focus on teaching healthier ways of eating such as juicing, healthy detoxs to cleanse the systems and other healthy ways of living.

Afro-Peruvian Dance presented by De Cajón Project

DE CAJóN Project is a community based arts organization dedicated to educating populations about the cultural contributions of Peruvians of African descent. As a movement we facilitate music and dance workshops; offer lectures and residencies; perform widely throughout the Pacific Northwest with our music and dance company; and build inter-cultural and inter-generational communities through art. We actively support similar efforts in Peru and we collaborate with other individuals and organizations that use art as an empowering tool for change. Interested in a on-going rehearsal and performance space (music/dance).

 

 

 

 

Movies Under The Moonlight @ Mann

Outdoor Summer Film Series 

Fridays 8pm

Outdoor Summer Film Festival for Families. Five week film festival for families at Horace Mann School every Friday evening beginning Friday July 19th, 2013 is the kick off.  We will start the movie at dusk (right after the sun goes down.) So bring your blankets, sleeping bags, pillows, tents, etc. and enjoy a family friendly movie with us. We will have light refreshments for the children. You are welcome to bring your own refreshments too. See you there! 

 

 

 

Young Geniuses Academy Game Development 99

 Sat. 11am-2pm

Game development 99 is an exploration course. Students will spend time developing simple games. Once we complete one game, we’ll quickly move to the developing a brand new game. This approach will expose the children to a wide range of development problems while hopefully covering topics that further pique their interest in game development. Art from their art course will also be incorporated into many of their games. The students will build on their existing skills in C# programming, problem solving and critical thinking, logic and conditional reasoning.

 

 

 

AFRICATOWN GROW URBAN GARDENING PROJECT

Africatown GROW is a Community Youth and Family Urban Gardening Project focused on creating a learning space to share ideas on how to grow healthy and nutritious food, people and communities. The project provides great opportunities for learning,  bonding and community building.

 

 

UPCOMING EVENTS

Aug 16th – Image Is Everything Fashion Program Parent Appreciation Night

Aug 16th – Africatown Village Children’s Collective Showcase & Potluck

Aug  22nd – Entrepreneurs Forum presented by Remix Marketing & Consulting

Aug 25th –  Back 2 School Clothing Swap & Shop

Aug 28th – Justice Here & Now Forum: Ending The School To Prison Pipeline

Aug 29th – Central District Creative Tech Summit/Mixer/Meet & Greet

 

More Highlights:

 

Young Urban Entrepreneurs

 

Africatown Live! Concert Series

 

Art 4 Justice Jam Session

 

“Yo-Ghana” Afro-Yoga Nights

 

 

Juneteenth Mayoral Candidate Forum

 

Community Potlucks

 

New Development: 1801 S Jackson Street

LOGO-SquareWHEN:  AUGUST 21ST 6:15 – 7:30 PM

WHERE:  DOUGLASS TRUTH LIBRARY

The Central Area Land Use Review Committee (CA LURC) will be holding a community meeting to give residents a chance to review and make comments on a new development, the Atlantic Flats proposed at 1801 S Jackson Street. Isola Capital is the developer of the site and will be providing a presentation on the proposed design followed by a comment & discussion period. Please join us in providing feedback & direction to the developer that can help them create a project that is well suited to the needs of our residents and a great addition to  the unique fabric of the Central Area.

WHO IS THE CA LURC?

We are a community group composed of residents, some of us with experience in the building industry, all working together in a positive atmosphere of collaboration with incoming developers. We aim to facilitate community conversations to constructively shape development as it enters our neighborhood.

QUESTIONS? 

Check out our website at www.centralarealurc.org or email us at [email protected]

Cat thief on the loose

My name is David Delgado and last night (8/16/13) at about 945pm my black cat was “kidnapped”.  I was walking with my cat home on the corner of 31st ave when a very angry man ran up to me and threatened me with violence demanding me to give him my cat.  The man was bigger than me and I did not want to fight.  I assumed calling 911 and asking for police help was the right thing to do.  The man cursed, insulted me and called me very socially ignorant names.  I never saw this man before this time.  He took my cat and ran up 32ed Street from E. Republican heading to Lake   Washington Blvd.  I called 911 and when the police came he told me there was nothing they can do.  I was informed by the police that people are allowed to protect their property.

 

I prefer not to take this police officer’s advice in engaging in violence.  I am not a violent person. I just want my cat back, and I would like to press charges against the man that threatened my life and stole my cat.  Will someone please help me.

 

My cat and I have been together for the last 15 years.  My cat’s name is Resin and he is all black and super friendly.  He was in an accident not too long ago where he lost his tail and his tail is scared and it is still healing.  If anyone sees my cat please e-mail the time and the place he was seen.

 

If Resin is with a Caucasian male that stands about 5 “10” and appears in his 40’s do not attempt to interact with the cat or the person.  This man seems very dangerous and he did not seem reasonable at all.   The license plates of the man that stole my cat read ACA6744.  If this anyone in the Central District area seems this car please e-mail me the time and the place.  I just want my cat back.

 

My e-mail is [email protected]

 

Thank youIMAG04551IMAG04561

Anyone seen this Mural?

Madrona-MuralPainted on five 4 X 8 foot plywood panels, this mural was funded by public money and created by community middle school youth. Designed to represent the history of the Umojafest parade, the images depicted past and present parade participants. For several months, it was mounted on the current “Neighbor Lady” building near 23rd and Union. Recently, the mural was removed. Please let us know if you have seen this mural, it belongs to the community and we’d like to install it in a new, visible Central District location.

Don’t miss Central Area Community Festival Association tomorrow

Official event poster

Official event poster

The 16th annual Central Area Community Festival takes place tomorrow, August 17th, at the Garfield Community Center and Playground.

The festival aims to showcase the neighborhood’s businesses and organizations providing resources and educational services to the area.

More on the event from CACF:

CACF is an event that provides a venue for the community to share cultural and educational information that raises the awareness on issues that affect the quality of ones life. This year’s theme is “Fulfilling Life.”

Parnells open air drug market

Most of my posts are concerning sustainable design, solar energy grants, that kind of stuff. Here is a MAJOR (yes caps) multi-decade horror story of unsustainable community design that rips any attempt at constructive placemaking in the CD to shreds. Regular readers have seen posts about gentrification, how the CD is a containament zone, and ongoing arson and violence. What you see below touches all of these. So, readers this is an election year, how should we as a community address this Parnells issue. The question is asked, so read below.

Date: Wed, Aug 14, 2013 at 7:01 AM
Subject: Re: Please help our neighborhood
To:, [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected], [email protected],

I would like to take a moment to solidly concur with every single thing Grace has written (below).  The situation along the Dearborn corridor, but particularly around Parnell’s Mini Mart, has become intolerable.

Last night, we were witness to open-air drug dealing, public drinking, public urination, minors using drugs and alcohol, money and drugs changing hands, people sitting in their cars and raking out and snorting lines, and one very suspicious vehicle that had its license plates removed.
We called this in.  Here’s what the police did:  nothing.

Sunday, I saw two girls (about 13-15 years old) come to Parnell’s and wait on the curb.  They didn’t have to wait long.  A man approached them, they handed the man two ten-dollar bills.  The man met briefly with a confederate and returned to hand the girls a small drug baggie.  The girls slipped off to the cul-de-sac at the West end of Dearborn to share their purchase.  I saw all of this from the roof of my garage.  I could not have had a better view of what was going on if I was standing right next to them.
I called this in.  Here’s what the police did: nothing.

This is not an occasional thing.  This is every single night, rain or shine.  And it has been going on for eleven years (per my personal experience) and has been going on since the 1980s according to longer residents.  We complain.  We have community meetings.  Representatives from government and law enforcement show up and eagerly take notes as if they were hearing all of this for the first time.
And here’s what happens:  nothing.

We have all been told “be sure to call these events in,” but I am here to tell you that endeavor yields nothing.  I have dealt with everything from indifference to ridicule when calling police dispatchers.  No one (except the residents) appears to take any of this seriously.

The re-striping and re-curbing of the parking lot at Parnell’s Mini Mart has not made the drug dealers and chronic public inebriates go away; it has simply moved them across the street, where they hang out next to a vacant building with apparent impunity.  Parnell’s continues to furnish them with cheap alcohol, and they continue to break the law.  When a police cruiser does come by, it keeps on moving.
And here’s what happens:  nothing.

I am confident that I am sharing nothing new here.  But I am sick to death of this situation, and I want to know what steps are going to be taken to alleviate these problems and make this a neighborhood again.  And I hope your advice is better than “keep calling dispatch,” because I have lost all faith in that approach.  The people on the other end of the phone make it abundantly clear that they aren’t interested.

The lawlessness and unsanitary behavior around Parnell’s Mini Mart and the vacant building across from it needs to stop.

Sincerely,

–Kevin Boze

 

 

 

—–Original Message—–
FromTo: matthew.york <[email protected]>; ron.wilson <[email protected]>; nick.metz <[email protected]>; john.hayes <[email protected]>; sally.bagshaw <[email protected]>; stan.lock <[email protected]>; Dan.Okada <[email protected]>;
Cc: Sent: Tue, Aug 13, 2013 10:57 pm
Subject: Please help our neighborhood

Good evening, although I am  actually not having a very good evening. Here’s why:

How would you like to have a constant block party going on right outside your back door every day? Complete with hookers, drug dealers, drunks peeing on the sidewalk, firecrackers, piles of garbage and empty bottles, blaring offensive music, people yelling and screaming, and more than just occasionally, gunfire. I bet you wouldn’t like it just as much as I don’t like it. How about the three guys who camp out on the sidewalk every day and night for hours, drinking and selling drugs? They bring chairs! We’ve tried asking these people to be quiet, to move, to pick up their garbage, to use a restroom to relieve themselves instead of using my garden. But drunks and stoners and criminals don’t seem to care. I thought that the city did not allow homeless encampments on public property, but that is essentially what we have occurring on our block. Yesterday, I watched yet again as one of these men unzipped his trousers right in front of me, in broad daylight, pulled out his penis and urinated on a street tree outside my garage. This was less than two hours after I had asked these gentlemen personally not to use the street as a restroom.

But what is more outrageous is that this poor tree, and more than 30 other trees on Dearborn Street between 23rd and MLK, all were planted as part of a neighborhood improvement project that I helped organize back in 2005. We got trees donated by the city, acquired some grant money to remove concrete filling the parking strip and hire local teenagers to help, then planted trees and ground cover along three city blocks. All this was accomplished with the help of dozens of neighbors who came together to work on improving the streetscape to deter crime. Now, to watch these chronic public inebriates killing the trees with their beer-laden piss is an incredible insult to our neighborhood. As well as being illegal.

I called 911 to complain around 9:30 this evening (Aug. 13) and the dispatcher said she would pass on the information, but we didn’t see any police units come by on our block. Would it be possible to find out if any record of my complaint exists?

This is just the latest in 11 years of complaints to the city about the crime occurring around Parnell’s Mini Mart at the corner of 23rd Avenue South and South Dearborn. And yet the party continues in the street, right outside my door. Can any of you do anything to deter this illegal activity that does so much to damage the quality of life in my neighborhood?

I certainly understand that the Police Department has more important crimes to worry about, but thank you at least for reading this complaint.

Sincerely,

Grace Reamer

Stephanie Tschida

206-579-3538

[email protected]

Detour routes for this weekend’s partial closure of Boren/Jackson intersection

Continuing construction of the First Hill Streetcar line will partially close the Boren and Jackson intersection this weekend and next.

Partial closures will take place from 7 p.m. on Friday, August 16th and continue until 6 a.m. Monday, August 19th. Expect similar closures next weekend, August 23-26.

Construction crews will be working to lay track in this area as well as restore roadways. If you’re traveling through this area during the construction, use these detours:

  • Southbound traffic on Boren Ave S will be directed to use 12th Ave S, S Jackson St, and Rainier Ave S.
  • Northbound traffic on Rainier Ave S will be directed to use 14th Ave S, Yesler Way and Boren Ave S.
  • Westbound traffic on S Jackson St will be directed to use 14th Ave S, Yesler Way, 12th Ave S and S Jackson St.
Courtesy of Seattle Streetcar website

Courtesy of Seattle Streetcar website

Support Med Mix

Med_Mix_Central_DistrictWe are asking our community members to stand and support the Med Mix, Ater the burning of their 23rd and union location by an arsonist last Sunday night. please come and show your support to a locally owned business.

Marita Dingus: Fashion Free-For-All August 17, 2013 – January 6, 2014 PACCAR Gallery

Photograph Courtesy of Nancy LeVine.

Photograph Courtesy of Nancy LeVine.

 

Marita Dingus: Fashion Free-For-All

August 17, 2013 – January 6, 2014

PACCAR Gallery

Organized by the Northwest African American Museum
Guest Curator: Vicki Halper

 

Marita Dingus: Fashion Free-for-All exhibits complete outfits and accessories made by the artist as part of her personal wardrobe between 2002 and 2008.

 

In creating her clothing, Dingus uses the same techniques and aesthetic as in her figurative sculpture-recycled and reconfigured materials, mixed media, and raw exuberance. “There’s no difference between my art and my clothing,” she says. “Of course I want to cut up and modify both.” 

 

Dingus made the garments to celebrate her return to the Northwest after four years of living in the deep South, a culture that she found alien and sometimes frightening. (In 1998, James Byrd, Jr. was tied to a truck and dragged to his death in Texas, where she was then living.)  Like many in the art world, she once dressed in black. In the South, she wore khaki and white, “trying to look invisible.” Back in the Seattle area, she expressed her relief by dressing herself in colorful, improvised, and lighthearted clothing.

Stay tuned for an artist reception in September 2013.

Northwest African American Museum
2300 S Massachusetts Street
Seattle, WA 98144
206-518-6000
www.naamnw.org