Boston Herald

Black art, culture center stage

- By Gayla Cawley gcawley@bostonhera­ld.com

“Black history is American history, and we always need to make sure that we are reminding people of that fact,” City Council President Ruthzee Louijeune said to conclude a kick-off event for Boston’s Black History Month celebratio­ns.

The nearly two-hour event began yesterday with a flagraisin­g outside City Hall and wrapped up with a locallycat­ered indoor press conference honoring the city’s Black artistry and culture, in keeping with this year’s theme of “African Americans and the Arts.”

Pointing to the national attention that Boston received from last year’s installati­on of The Embrace on the Common, Mayor Michelle Wu said the monument, described on its website as an important cultural symbol of equity and justice for city residents, is representa­tive of the “gift and the power of Black art.”

“The ability to include, bring out and double down on the strength of our communitie­s, using beauty as a multiplier and a challenger,” Wu said. “Boston would not be the city that it is today if not for our Black leaders, Black artists and activists, Black entreprene­urs and advocates all sharing their craft with the deep knowledge of what is at stake for our communitie­s.”

Wu honored two local artists at the event, Paul Goodnight and Shaumba-Yandje Dibinga.

The trauma of the Vietnam War left Goodnight without the ability to speak, a voice he rediscover­ed through the canvases he painted, Wu said, before introducin­g his daughter, Aziza Goodnight, to accept the award on her father’s behalf.

The mayor described the second recipient, Dibinga, founding artistic and executive director of a Roxburybas­ed performing arts center, as a “poet, playwright, performer, founder and educator who has shared her gift through OrigiNatio­n.”

The day’s ceremony also featured a rendition of the Black national anthem, “Lift Every Voice and Sing,” from Danny Rivera Jr. and a prayer from the Rev. Art J. Gordon, a pastor at the St. John Missionary Baptist Church.

It also included a number of speakers, highlighte­d by Taneisha Nash Laird, an author and president/CEO of

Roxbury Arts and Cultural Center, who gave the keynote address.

After rattling off a lengthy list of Black artists, poets and musicians that hail from the city, or “some of the stars etched upon the sky of Boston’s cultural legacy,” Nash Laird went on to say that those people “are guiding lights” and “examples of “Black excellence” for “aspiring talent incubated by the city,” while criticizin­g the backlash against so-called identity politics.

Those “detractors,” according to Nash Laird, “suggest that we should blend into some amorphous, tasteless and indistingu­ishable porridge that they called America.”

“For decades,” she added, “those same forces of the 19th century, of the 20th century, and even now into this millennium proclaimed that that nation was nothing more than a melting pot whose contents were only to be defined by how the ingredient­s they assumed came first, notwithsta­nding that Black Americans have been here for 400 years.”

 ?? NANCY LANE — BOSTON HERALD ?? Boston, MA - Mayor Michelle Wu speaks during Black history month at City Hall.
NANCY LANE — BOSTON HERALD Boston, MA - Mayor Michelle Wu speaks during Black history month at City Hall.

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