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Discovering Centre Paris Anim’ Ken Saro-Wiwa: Where Global Justice Meets Parisian Street Culture

  ​Discovering Centre Paris Anim’ Ken Saro-Wiwa: Where Global Justice Meets Parisian Street Culture ​If you wander down the historic, vibrant streets of the 20th arrondissement in northeastern Paris, you will eventually find yourself on Rue de Buzenval. Amidst the local bakeries, modern murals, and bustling neighborhood life stands a striking, four-story building spanning over 1,000 square meters. ​This is the Centre Paris Anim’ Ken Saro-Wiwa —a public cultural powerhouse that serves as a vital bridge between international environmental history and local grassroots creativity. ​The Story Behind the Name ​To understand the soul of this center, one must understand the man whose name is etched above its doors. Ken Saro-Wiwa was a legendary Nigerian author, television producer, and environmental activist. In the 1990s, he led a non-violent movement against the catastrophic environmental degradation of his homeland—the Ogoni region of the Niger Delta—caused by decades of unregula...

Discovering the Living History of Paris’s Oldest Black-Owned Bookstore

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  More Than Books: Stepping Inside the Historic Capital of Pan-African Thought ​For travelers originating from the African continent and across the global Diaspora, a journey to Paris often carries a complex weight. We walk through a metropolis built on centuries of global history, navigating its grand boulevards while seeking out our own reflection, our own lineages, and our own intellectual anchors. ​If you are guiding or traveling with a group of thinkers, creatives, or heritage seekers visiting Paris this summer, there is one non-negotiable pilgrimage that must be on your itinerary: 25 bis Rue des Écoles in the historic Latin Quarter. This is the home of Librairie Présence Africaine —the oldest Black-owned independent publishing house and bookstore in the world. ​Here is why this space is vital, how to experience it, and how to frame it for a visiting delegation. The Pan African Voice ​To step up to the striking ebony black façade of Présence Africaine is not merely to ...

The Lifeline to Victory: The Untold Story of the Red Ball Express and Its Heroic Drivers

  The Lifeline to Victory: The Untold Story of the Red Ball Express and Its Heroic Drivers ​Following the monumental success of the D-Day landings, Allied forces faced an unexpected, paralyzing crisis. General George S. Patton’s Third Army and General Courtney Hodges’ First Army were breaking out across France at lightning speed—so fast that they were rapidly outrunning their own supply chains. With the French railway network completely shattered by pre-invasion Allied bombings, a radical tactical alternative was born: the Red Ball Express. ​Operating from August 25 to November 16, 1944, this relentless, 24/7 convoy loop became the literal lifeline of the European theater. Yet, the most profound chapter of this logistical miracle lies in the identity of its backbone. Because the United States military was strictly segregated during World War II, institutional prejudices unfairly barred Black troops from most frontline combat roles. As a result, approximately 75% of the 23,000 dr...

The Original Editors: How the 1956 Sorbonne Congress Anticipated the Movement for Knowledge Equity

The Original Editors: How the 1956 Sorbonne Congress Anticipated the Movement for Knowledge Equity ​Walk past the grand stone facades of the Sorbonne in Paris today, and it is easy to see it purely as an elite monument to the Western academic canon. But seventy years ago, in September 1956, a profound act of systemic narrative correction occurred inside its walls. ​Long before the internet, open-source software, or the concept of a global wiki, 63 intellectuals from 24 countries gathered in the Descartes Amphitheatre for the First International Congress of Black Writers and Artists . Organized by Alioune Diop and the trailblazing publishing house Présence Africaine , this assembly included titans like Aimé Césaire, Frantz Fanon, Léopold Sédar Senghor, Richard Wright, and a young James Baldwin. ​Historians often call this event the "Cultural Bandung" of the Black world. But for those of us navigating the modern open-knowledge movement, it represents something else: the blue...

Princes, Powers, and the Cultural Bandung: Remembering the 1956 Congress of Black Writers and Artists

Princes, Powers, and the Cultural Bandung: Remembering the 1956 Congress of Black Writers and Artists ​Walk into the Latin Quarter of Paris today, and it is easy to get lost in the romance of the city's cafes and bookshops. But if you walk past the Sorbonne’s grand facades, you are walking past the epicenter of one of the most intellectually explosive moments of the 20th century. ​Seventy years ago, in September 1956, the Amphitheatre Descartes became the staging ground for what historians now call the "Cultural Bandung" of the Black world: The First International Congress of Black Writers and Artists.   ​Organized by the visionary Senegalese intellectual Alioune Diop and his trailblazing journal/publishing house Présence Africaine, the gathering brought together 63 official delegates from 24 countries. It was a massive, unprecedented roll call of Black genius spanning the African continent, the Caribbean, and the United States.   The Global Stakes ​To understand th...

Glass Towers and Separate Doors: Who Actually Lives in Hudson Yards?

​ Glass Towers and Separate Doors: Who Actually Lives in Hudson Yards? ​ By LJ Dabo  ​To the casual tourist walking the High Line, Hudson Yards looks like a monolithic fortress of corporate power and high-end consumerism. It is a landscape defined by towering glass offices, a massive shopping mall, and the honeycomb structure of the Vessel. ​But behind the corporate facades lies a growing residential neighborhood. Thousands of New Yorkers now sleep, cook, and live their lives high above the active rail yards of the West Side. ​However, the reality of who gets to live here—and how they experience the neighborhood—is split by a deep economic divide. To see how the residential side of Phase I actually functions, we have to look closely at its two signature residential skyscrapers. ​ The Residential Blueprint: 15 vs. 35 Hudson Yards ​The initial phase of the development concentrated its residential footprint into two massive towers, each standing nearly 90 stories tall. While t...

The Paper Pipeline: How Harlem’s Poverty Financed Manhattan’s Luxury Mega-Project

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​ The Paper Pipeline: How Harlem’s Poverty Financed Manhattan’s Luxury Mega-Project ​ By LJ Dabo ​When Hudson Yards opened its shiny, glass-and-steel doors to the public, it was marketed as a triumph of modern engineering—a $25 billion "city within a city" built over a functioning rail yard on Manhattan’s affluent West Side. But beneath the luxury shopping malls, high-end restaurants, and multi-million-dollar condominiums lies a paper trail that leads nearly 100 blocks north. ​It is a story of geographical gerrymandering, federal loopholes, and a stark reality: the most expensive private real estate development in United States history was partially bankrolled by a federal program explicitly designed to alleviate poverty in places like Harlem. ​ The Billion-Dollar Loophole ​To understand how a luxury development on 34th Street connected to public housing complexes in Harlem, one must look at the mechanics of the federal EB-5 Immigrant Investor Program . ​Created by Con...