Events
BCX in Oakland: Building the Infrastructure of Liberation Oct. 9 at 6 p.m.
The Black Contractors Xchange presents Building the Infrastructure of Liberation on Oct. 9 at 6 p.m. at Everett and Jones Barbecue, 126 Broadway with presentations on two projects designed to reverse displacement in San Francisco and Oakland and galvanize the 750,000 African-Americans in northern California with $15 billion of yearly income.
Carolyn Johnson, a board member of Pacific Community Ventures, which operates the Entrepreneurs of Color Fund, discusses the planned Black Community Zone in east Oakland and John William Templeton, co-founder of National Black Business Month, describes the Dr. B. Nathaniel Burbridge Center for Inclusive Innovation and Sargent Johnson National Museum of African-American Art on the San Francisco waterfront.
Licensed contractors and construction professionals from throughout the region are invited to RSVP to johnwtempleton@blackmoney.com or call 415-240-3537 by Monday, Oct. 7 and to consider participating in the weekly meetings of the Black Contractors Xchange at African-American restaurants. This is a new approach to economic equality driven by the capacity of our community to control its own land use and to profit from the growth of our wider metropolitan area proactively.
To understand the data and practice, visit blackbusinessmonth.com and order We’re Due: State of Black Business, 16th edition. The offer includes a yearly subscription to the Journal of Black Innovation.
Arts and Culture
Richmond Preps for Full Weekend of Cinco de Mayo Festivities
Cinco de Mayo festivities in Richmond and San Pablo are some of the bests in Bay, and organizers say that tradition will be alive and well at this weekend’s annual parade and festival. The action kicks off Saturday, May 4, with the 16th Annual Cinco de Mayo Richmond/San Pablo Peace & Unity Parade. The parade of floats, performances, and community organizations starts at 10 a.m. at 24th Street and Barrett Avenue and Richmond and ends at 12:30 p.m. at St. Paul’s Church, 1845 Church Lane in San Pablo.
By Mike Kinney
The Richmond Standard
Cinco de Mayo festivities in Richmond and San Pablo are some of the bests in Bay, and organizers say that tradition will be alive and well at this weekend’s annual parade and festival.
The action kicks off Saturday, May 4, with the 16th Annual Cinco de Mayo Richmond/San Pablo Peace & Unity Parade. The parade of floats, performances, and community organizations starts at 10 a.m. at 24th Street and Barrett Avenue and Richmond and ends at 12:30 p.m. at St. Paul’s Church, 1845 Church Lane in San Pablo.
The parade’s Grand Marshall this year will be community organizer Diego Garcia, owner of Leftside Printing.
The festivities continue Sunday with the Cinco de Mayo Festival along 23rd Street, which last year drew over 100,000 people, according to the 23rd Street Merchants Association. This year’s festival will again run from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. between the intersections of Rheem Avenue and Clinton Avenue. It will feature two entertainment stages, one sponsored by La Raza 93.3 FM at 23rd and Rheem, and another sponsored by Radio Lazer FM at 23rd and Clinton.
Both events are important for the city and the region’s Latino community.
San Pablo Mayor Genoveva Calloway, who co-chairs the parade alongside John Marquez, president of the Contra Costa Community College District Board of Trustees, says Saturday’s festivities are about bringing the Richmond and San Pablo communities together in unity.
“This truly connects the spectators and people in the parade as one,” Calloway said. “The parade showcases the real communities of Richmond and San Pablo – our nonprofits, schools, horse riders, classic cars and trucks, our local businesses. All of these people represent the heartbeat of our community.”
Rigo Mendoza, vice president of the 23rd Street Merchants Association, said that at its heart, Richmond’s Cinco de Mayo Festival celebrates the date the Mexican army’s victory over France at the Battle of Puebla on May 5, 1862.
But John Marquez started up the popular festival to bring the community together and also to exhibit the community’s businesses and culture to visitors, Mendoza said. The gathering was also a way to promote peace in the community.
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Oakland Post: Week of May 1 – 7, 2024
The printed Weekly Edition of the Oakland Post: Week of May 1 – 7, 2024
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