San Francisco Chronicle

Hip-hop and health mix at D.R.I.P. Fest

- By Matthias Gafni Reach Matthias Gafni: matthias.gafni@sfchronicl­e.com

Dej Summervill­e sat down at the free Umoja Health booth, and as beats from Stunnaman0­2’s rap set pulsated through the walls she received a COVID booster, blood pressure test and diabetes screening blood prick.

“I have been neglecting my health the last three years, just putting it on the back burner,” said Summervill­e, a Cal State East Bay student. “This is forcing me to hold myself accountabl­e.”

This was exactly what Khafre Jay had in mind when he decided to merge hip-hop and public health and bring the third iteration of D.R.I.P. Fest to the Western Addition on Saturday afternoon, an event that attracted hundreds of attendees.

Jay, an activist for 15 years, noticed a large number of health organizati­ons offering important services to communitie­s in need, but failing to reach their target.

“I lost a lot of faith in San Francisco voters and collective white empathy,” said Jay, wearing a black “Make Racists Afraid Again” hat and standing in the lobby of the African American Arts and Culture Complex, which hosted Saturday’s event. “I don’t know what will help, all I know is I want Black and brown people to live longer.”

Jay organized an Oakland version, one in the BayviewHun­ters Point neighborho­od, and plans to host a fourth D.R.I.P. (Dropping Resources in Place), focusing on reproducti­ve rights, in the Excelsior district next quarter. Pivotal to each event is incorporat­ing local hip hop artists to draw crowds who often fall through the cracks.

“Hip-hop is the strongest organizing tool we have,” Jay said. “We have a lot of health care groups doing great things, but they have no idea how to create safe spaces.”

Dr. Kim Rhoads, with Umoja Health, catered to a steady

stream of men and women receiving colorectal cancer screenings, diabetes tests, COVID vaccinatio­ns and other chronic disease management

advice.

“We’re not brick and mortar, we try to show up where people already are,” Rhoads said.

Francesca Gonzalez teamed up with Jay to gain exposure for her new organizati­on, Freedom Forward, which works to prevent sex traffickin­g among those 14 to 24 years old. Freedom Forward handed out skin-care and hair-care products, since such basic needs are often an entry point for those looking to traffic young people, she said.

“We’re using D.R.I.P Fest as an outreach tool and use the power of hip-hop to engage with people who can feel unreachabl­e,” Gonzalez said. After attending the last event in the Bayview, Gonzalez said her organizati­on, which is only a year old, saw an uptick in public awareness of its HYPE Center drop-in location on Portrero Avenue.

Charndry Lee, a hair stylist, went to high school with Gonzalez and volunteere­d to join her friend and offer free hair care.

“I love the atmosphere and knowing I’m doing something good for the community,” Lee said as she braided the hair of Joyce Iulio-Sua of San Francisco.

“I saw these talented, beautiful young ladies and I thought why not,” said IulioSua, who runs Iulio Resources Foundation out of the Bayview focusing on health care, workforce developmen­t and street violence prevention. “We’re bringing it together for young entreprene­urs … and combining them together to form the peace, wellness and health in our underserve­d communitie­s.”

As children painted graffiti with a muralist and musicians performed on stage, Ebony Atlas, a health worker with the San Francisco Department of Public Health, sat in a neighborin­g hallway and handed out pamphlets about a number of mental health programs.

“A lot of stigma comes with African Americans and mental health. We’re trying to promote that it’s OK,” she said. “No one really knows what we have to offer. So we wanted to use this opportunit­y for African Americans specifical­ly to know that there’s this program geared toward us.”

And that’s what Jay was hoping for.

“We’re that bridge,” he said. “My North Star is: How do we keep this consistent?”

 ?? Photos by Matthias Gafni/Special to the Chronicle ?? Hip-hop artist Sa-Roc performs on Saturday at D.R.I.P. Fest in the African American Arts and Culture Complex in the Western Addition.
Photos by Matthias Gafni/Special to the Chronicle Hip-hop artist Sa-Roc performs on Saturday at D.R.I.P. Fest in the African American Arts and Culture Complex in the Western Addition.
 ?? ?? Charndry Lee works on Joyce Iulio-Sua’s braid at a free hair clinic on Saturday at D.R.I.P. Fest. “I love the atmosphere and knowing I’m doing something good for the community,” Lee said.
Charndry Lee works on Joyce Iulio-Sua’s braid at a free hair clinic on Saturday at D.R.I.P. Fest. “I love the atmosphere and knowing I’m doing something good for the community,” Lee said.
 ?? ?? Ebony Atlas, left, hands out pamphlets and informatio­n on mental health programs targeting African Americans on Saturday at D.R.I.P. Fest.
Ebony Atlas, left, hands out pamphlets and informatio­n on mental health programs targeting African Americans on Saturday at D.R.I.P. Fest.

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