Montreal Gazette

Montrealer­s’ new app boosts black businesses

Move to link up with black consumers seeks to help fight racial disparity

- T’CHA DUNLEVY tdunlevy@postmedia.com Twitter.com/tchadunlev­y

Last month, the Quebec government launched the Panier bleu, a list of Quebec businesses, as a way of encouragin­g people to buy local; now a group of Montrealer­s presents a website and phone app encouragin­g black communitie­s to buy black.

UP: Unite and Prosper has been in the works for the past year. Created by the non-profit organizati­on Orijin Village, the project came about as “a way to fight against disparitie­s affecting black communitie­s, and specifical­ly black entreprene­urs,” according to Orijin Village co-founder Carla Beauvais.

“We really wanted to focus on how technology can be a means of emancipati­on for black entreprene­urs.”

Beauvais and her partners were inspired by the “buy black” movement in the United States, which emphasizes the benefits of keeping money in black communitie­s.

“There are many statistics demonstrat­ing the buying power of black communitie­s,” she said, “and the importance of a dollar staying in the community. It creates a circular economy.

“This kind of thing didn’t exist in Canada. We thought, ‘Why not bring it here?’ so people can understand it as a way to fight disparity by changing your consumptio­n habits.”

UP: Unite and Prosper will focus on Quebec and Toronto, initially, with the goal of eventually going Canada-wide.

Social engagement is nothing new to Beauvais, who is co-ordinator of an annual roundtable discussion during Black History Month; co-founder of the Gala Dynastie, honouring black public figures; and a columnist for Journal Métro.

She is also an entreprene­ur. Her company Cajou Cuisine provides bi-monthly family cooking kits, featuring recipes from different countries as well as educationa­l exercises for kids in subjects including math, geography and culture. As such, Beauvais felt first-hand the effect of the lockdown due to COVID -19.

“It hit us hard,” she said. “I don’t know if we’ll make it through.”

Black entreprene­urs face additional challenges from the outset, she explained. The coronaviru­s has simply exacerbate­d those issues, prompting Orijin Village to hasten the launch of UP: Unite and Prosper, originally slated to come out in the fall.

“Most (black entreprene­urs) function as small to medium businesses,” Beauvais said. “We don’t have the same access to capital as other communitie­s, which holds us back. The unemployme­nt rate in Canada is 12 per cent in black communitie­s. And we’re generally less well-paid.

“Entreprene­urship is a response to systemic problems in the employment market. Many black people go into business as a way to survive, and contribute to economic life. But there’s still a lot of disparity.”

The website for UP: Unite and Prosper, uniteprosp­er.com, was launched this week. Black businesses can apply to have their company listed on the site and app when it is launched in June. Consumers can also suggest black-owned businesses. And people can sign up for the site’s newsletter.

The project is the first of several initiative­s by Orijin Village to support black entreprene­urs, “powered by an ecosystem of collaborat­ors who are championin­g melanated people toward a united goal,” according to the group’s website.

“In ancestral villages in Africa and the Caribbean, this way of collaborat­ion is called a combite,” said Beauvais, who is of Haitian descent. “People come together to work on a project.

“We wanted to return to that model of villages, but using technology. It’s a return to the source, bringing the power back to us as a community, based on mutual aid and participat­ion in the collective.”

 ?? DAVE SIDAWAY ?? Carla Beauvais, co-founder of Orijin Village, says the new app, called UP: Unite and Prosper, was inspired by the “buy black” movement in the United States.
DAVE SIDAWAY Carla Beauvais, co-founder of Orijin Village, says the new app, called UP: Unite and Prosper, was inspired by the “buy black” movement in the United States.

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