Month: October 2024

On Yetunde & Education
October 31, 2024

Here you go—some words I wrote from the heart about my baby girl and my beliefs about education.

Can we build something better than Oxford? Time will tell. wanna join hands?

Lolade
October 30, 2024
Genesis: Where my Love for NHV Began
October 30, 2024

Hi folks, below is a processed transcript of a vnote in which I detailed the origins of my relationship with New Haven and how it led me to wanting to work on this project. The first section is a summary and the latter is a cleaned up transcript (all processed from a vnote I recorded about this project earlier in the year). I’d love to hear your thoughts on the below. Please feel free to leave me a comment or shoot us an email at [email protected]

Falling in Love with New Haven

To give you a little background on how I came up with this idea, I moved to New Haven in 2017 to do my master’s at Yale, which was a significant move for me and my daughter. Leaving Black Brooklyn, the epicenter of Black creativity, for one of the peaks of whiteness was nerve-wracking, but I quickly fell in love with New Haven. Yale’s beautiful architecture, green spaces, and the intentionality and art throughout the city captivated me. New Haven’s beauty and energetic vibe always lifted my mood, making it a place that felt like a little Brooklyn suburb – calmer, quieter, and cleaner, yet still vibrant and connected to New York.

Building Community and Future Vision

As a natural-born community builder, I sought out where the Black people congregated and, not finding it, created it. I focused on building community among African grad students and Black Americans at Yale. Hosting events like the Atlantic Brunch Series, where we celebrated different parts of the Black diaspora, helped us connect meaningfully and foster a sense of belonging. My love for New Haven and its proximity to Brooklyn made it easy for me to fall in love with this place and want to tell its stories. I have met incredible people like Nadine Nelson and Ife-Michelle Gardin, who were first to share with me the rich histories of Black New Haven. The goal of New World Haven is to tell New Haven’s most glorious, radical Black stories from the future’s perspective, involving the community in sharing their histories and visions for the future. Join us on this joyous journey as we celebrate New Haven and its vibrant community.


ORIGINAL Voice Note

Full Original Transcript of First New World Haven Intro

Introduction to New World Haven

Peace, peace, peace. I believe it’s recording now. Took a minute. How y’all doing today? New World Haven is on my mind. It wants to be discussed, to be talked about. Spirit wants me to talk about it. If you’ve been keeping up, then you have heard of New World Haven. It’s a project that I recently received notification of a grant. I haven’t gotten the grant funds yet. And just so y’all know, we are only allowed to pay ourselves a percentage of that money less than half, so as rich as I am in spirit, you know, the funds go to the execution. The majority of the funds go to execution and they do encourage you to pay yourself something, so that’s awesome. But for me, why it is a viable business opportunity even, right? Because we’re shifting from thinking of ourselves as just artists and creators, and we have to be business people, right? So why I saw the opportunity as worthwhile, even though it’s 20K for a one-year project, is because there are streams of potential revenue through the project.

Falling in Love with New Haven

So just to give you a little bit of background and insight into how I came up with this idea. I came to New Haven in 2017 to do my master’s at Yale and it was a big move for me and my daughter. She had to go to my parents in Missouri for nine months, you know, for my first year. And, um, you know, I moved into the graduate dorms. I was like 30 years old, over 30 years old. And, um, it was, you know, it was awkward at first, right? It was like leaving black Brooklyn, the epicenter of black creativity, to come to, you know, one of the peaks of whiteness. And so that was very nerve-wracking, but I absolutely just was enamored with New Haven from the jump. And of course, Yale’s campus helps because, you know, I’m very into beautiful architecture. I’m very into green space. I’m just into beauty, you know, and design and intentionality and art.

When you live in a place like New Haven where everything is beautiful, you know, everything’s intentional, it’s not perfect. It’s not like a Morocco, but there is a lot of beauty in the architecture and design of the city. There’s a lot of, you know, ease and rest built into the city. It’s a beautiful place and energetically is really great. My daughter and I always say, every time we would come here, we would just, our mood would be lifted right after, you know, after we had left in 2019.

Building Community in New Haven

So I came to New Haven in 2017, did a master’s in African studies and ran a lot of shit while I was here, right? I was looking for, as with any place I go, I’m looking for where the Black people congregate, where the cool, you know, forward-thinking, visionary, creative, you know, fun-loving, high-vibrational Black people congregate. And I didn’t find it. So I created it, right? A few different ways. So as an African grad student, I sought community with other African grad students, black and African diaspora, first gen, the whole thing. So for me, I get along with everybody. I get along with folks fresh off the continent. I get along with folks from here. I straddle my identities evenly, in a sense. And it was interesting because I noticed such a chasm between the different factions of blackness on campus. But I’ll talk about that more in the future.

All I have to say, I fell in love with New Haven and got to work building community, particularly among African grad students. Um, and even, you know, black Americans. So of course my closest friends were from here, right? The closest friends, the people I spent the most time with while I was at Yale were from the States, you know, black folk, like radical folk. Right. But that is my gauge, right? The people you’re going to find me connecting with are more than likely going to be, um, thought leaders, you know, thinkers, innovators, right. Um, and radical ones at that, those who use their innovation skills to, you know, transform the experience of black people globally. Right.

Events and Community Engagement

So, um, you know, shout out to the Yale eating club and, you know, folks like Patrice and, and social and sociology and others that I spent a good amount of time with. And then, you know, there was African students, like, SOM, you know, congregation, right? Anyway, it was easy to build community in New Haven, in a sense, because there was so, you know, there was a generosity of space on campus, right? But even, like, outside of campus, you know, DJ Cash was willing to work with us, right? Was happy to work with us, really. So it was easy to throw parties, you know? It was easy to collaborate with restaurants, you know. Of course, I really want to do business with Yale, right? So it puts you in a really interesting position when you’re a student at the university you have university funds to buy food with, right? So I got busy. We hostedbusy we hosted some mixers, we did the Atlantic brunch series which I might want to bring back with this project. We’llproject we’ll see the Atlantic brunch series, we would bring food from different distinct parts of the black diaspora and we would learn about the cultures in those two places.

You always met a friend, you know, everybody would come and meet new friends and connect meaningfully. And yeah, and just feel more connected to the community. And so that has always been a key part of the medicine that I seek to put into the world. And we had these events, which put me in contact and, you know, in community and connection with a lot of different people around campus and around the city. And it just made me feel very comfortable here. The fact that it was easy to build community, that people were supportive of building community, and there was just tremendous opportunity to do so. So me as a natural-born community builder, community organizer, I do it in many different ways, right? But someone who experiences life in that way, Black folk in New Haven were very interesting to me. I got a very little taste of Black New Haven while I was in my two years at Yale because the bubble does keep you locked in so you don’t really see what’s out there as much as you would like.

Reflections and Future Vision

But I did get to experience some of Jason’s events and they were pretty much it. That was pretty much the highlight. He threw the Harvard-Yale party the year that it was in New Haven. It was a big party, big success. DJ was terrible, but you know. If you were around for Hybrid Yale 2017, stand up, because you know that DJ was a ratchet. But anyway, but it was still a great time regardless. So I got to go to some of Jason’s stuff, and he had some really interesting, creative ways of bringing folks together. And then there was a program at Dwight Hall where I got to meet Nadine and IfeMichelle Gardin and Tom Ficklin, you know? So it was like, everybody I interacted with from Black New Haven was like pretty dope, you know? And I was like, y’all are very interesting.

Being that I felt really at home in New Haven, just like energetically and architecturally, you know, I said to a friend recently, like, somebody said to me actually, that it was like a little, like a mini Brooklyn. And on the soft side, like, you know, but there’s something about New Haven that feels like a Brooklyn suburb. It feels like a calmer, quieter, cleaner, you know, Brooklyn suburb. Maybe like a Ditmas Park, kind of on the edge of the, you know, the internationality. So I love that about this place. Like, it really does. And to know that I could just get on the train and go to Brooklyn at any time, it’s a lot. You know, it’s like easy to just pop in and out.

But if you have to actually spend the night, considering how big my caravan needs to be because I’m a queen and all that, you know, it’s not fun, you know, taking a train and having to go from Uber to Union Station, you know, train to Grand Central, standing outside in the cold waiting for it. You know, the four from Grand Central to Crown Heights, whatever, whatever. I would like a bullet train right to the heart of Crown Heights. Hello. Can I get on the train at Dixwell Plaza or freaking Hamden Plaza or Yale and just be in Brooklyn in like 20 minutes? Like, I would love that. Yo, anything is possible, y’all.

So anyway, it’s my love for New Haven and its proximity to New York and Brooklyn, especially that, that made me, made it easy for me to fall in love with this place. And, um, made it really exciting for me to, like, tell the stories of this place, right? I hear so many rich stories. I always have to shout out Yvette Michelle because, like, the little gems that she drops. And there’s so many people, Nadine, there’s so many people who know about this place. And there’s just such rich histories, and you’re always finding out new things. For me, it usually adds up to, like, my daughter just entered the car. It usually adds up to…

Black radical tradition hello and you know that’s my church so when i hear about black people getting radical getting froggy with it i want to know what was going on i want to hear the story so those are the stories you know a lot of y’all that i’ve reached out to have reached out to me people if you’ve heard about you know the project like we gonna talk i want to hear you have if you have rich new haven histories come pull up pull up.

I think this will be like what the events are for. Maybe we could film y’all sharing different New Haven histories at these events. You know, I’m still ideating. So whatever ideas or whatever you think, I would love to hear from you. But really, the goal is to tell New Haven’s most glorious, most beautiful, most radical black stories in a way that and, you know, in a way that’s told from the future. One by, you know, some young characters that are living in the New Haven of the future. Hello. What is the New Haven of the future look like to you? I want to hear from you. Yeah. Told from that perspective. Right.

And so that’s really what I know right now. But we’re going to have at least a few events. Right. And so I’d love to partner with with y’all on the events. If you’re listening to this, there are there’s a few places that I’ve already identified. Shout out to Possible Futures. Lauren helped my application. Love you. Love you. Love you. Thank you so much. Shout out to Alicia of Bloom. Shout out to Miss Adriane Jefferson herself. Shout out to Ife Michelle of Elm City Lit Fest. These are all the folks who helped me get my application through in like less than a week, y’all. It was crazy. So love y’all so much and thank you so much.

But yeah, we’re gonna be having events and we’re figuring out the details of it all, but it’s gonna be a joyous journey. I invite you to join and to follow along, especially check out the other artists too, because I’m gonna link to the announcement. Everybody’s name except, I think, for one is linked. I’m still learning about them. I’m really, like, finding out, like, really amazing things. Shout out to Black Excellency. And shout out to Nora. They’re the two profiles I’ve been able to, like, go deep into. But, yeah, that’s what it is. I want to keep this nice and, you know, brief. But I love y’all. Thank you for listening. Thank you for all your support. And, yeah, we gonna make it. All right, get on the portal. PortalX.space. Love you. Peace.

Lolade
October 25, 2024
Slavery on the Ballot & Other News
October 25, 2024

Peace Family,

I felt the urgent need to let you know about the slavery policies being voted on this election—in the midst of all the other critical matters in this cycle.

I also talk about upcoming events at Yale and beyond—some of which did not make it into our newsletter.

Support our work to help us build automated Black calendar features into the Portal sooner than later. This will allow you to search for events by tags and zip code so that you can connect, build & thrive with more ease 😉

Listen to the Voice Note

Lolade
October 19, 2024
Martin, Malcolm & You
October 19, 2024

So I had a meeting today with Erik Clemons, one of the most visionary people I’ve ever met, and it inspired me to revisit the MLK speech at Riverside Church in New York. Delivered on April 4, 1967, the speech created problems for MLK but is often cited as one of his most powerful speeches.

Read below from the American Social History Project:

On April 4, 1967, Martin Luther King delivered his first major public statement against the Vietnam War, entitled “Beyond Vietnam: A Time to Break the Silence.” Addressing a crowd of 3,000 at Riverside Church in New York City, King condemned the war as anti-democratic, impractical, and unjust. He described the daily suffering of Vietnamese peasants caught in the crossfire, as well as the human and economic burdens being placed on America’s poor. Not only were lower-class Americans more likely to fight in Vietnam, but Johnson’s domestic “War on Poverty” designed to help poor families was being derailed by U.S. foreign policy. King called for an immediate end to the bombing and a negotiated peace settlement with Vietnam. Although some activists supported King’s opposition to the war, many were concerned that the speech would be perceived as unpatriotic and hinder the civil rights struggle by connecting it to the more radical peace movement.


“Some of us who have already begun to break the silence of the night have found that the calling to speak is often a vocation of agony. But we must speak.” – MLK Jr.


As a Malcolm disciple, who sees Christ in him, I have not given as much love to MLK in public. But I have to for this speech and for the appreciation that no matter how I may feel about these Ancestors’ politic, there is no doubt that they knowingly risked their lives, their families sacrificed their presence, so that you and I could enjoy the freedoms we do today.

Listen to Voice Note

On the painting – Kaleidoscope of Liberation

This vibrant digital painting by Otha “Vakseen” Davis III captures a powerful moment of unity between Martin Luther King Jr. and Malcolm X, rendered in an energetic blend of bold, kaleidoscopic colors. The radiant hues of purples, blues, greens, and yellows infuse the image with passion and hope, while their handshake symbolizes solidarity in the face of shared struggle. Against a backdrop of intricate geometric patterns evoking African heritage, the two figures appear as larger-than-life symbols of resilience and revolutionary thought. Vakseen’s dynamic style elevates this historic moment into a vivid celebration of Black brilliance and the enduring quest for justice.

Make a bid for the painting here.

“An edifice that produces beggars needs restructuring.” – MLK Jr.

For support building Liberated technology, strategizing on data and storytelling, you can book a Strategy Session with us at a discounted rate through tomorrow night at 11:59PM EST.

Lolade
October 13, 2024
Meeting Kaeli Rosselle
Sticky
October 13, 2024

Hi y’all. This is a vnote I recorded right after I left Jazzy’s tonight. This was one of those feelings you had to record.

Sending love

Lolade
October 10, 2024
Voice Notes to the Black Globe 10.10.24V
Sticky
October 10, 2024

Hey y’all. This is my latest download. I am called to share this with you.

If you see what is happening around the world, you know that God will not be mocked. Not in any of our lives, in Yashua’s name.

So anyway, this recording (I’m REALLY getting icky tired of communicating in English and I might have to go hideout in a Yoruba-speaking smart city very soon no cap) is my latest rant/download/prayer/heart medicine. It’s just what I was called to share. I pray it does something for you.

But I just want to be your reminder today to dream. To dream vigorously. Dream intently. Dream systematically. Be your own God. Get it done. We love you, so YOU love you 😘🩵

Audio recording below. Transcript coming below soon.

Much love,

Olori

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