Milwaukee Magazine

DOMINIQUE SAMARI

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BRIDGE-BUILDER Invested in making Milwaukee a better place for all

GROWING UP OUTSIDE Cincinnati, Dominique Samari wanted to emulate

Clair Huxtable of “The Cosby Show.” “As a young Black girl, watching a profession­al Black woman on TV for what was maybe the first time in history … she was the ideal of what I thought I wanted to be when I grew up,” Samari says. “I think the idea of being a lawyer was planted in me watching her.” After graduating from Ohio University, Samari applied to law schools across the country. She landed at Marquette and moved to Milwaukee, a city she’d never seen before. The experience wasn’t entirely positive.

“What I found in Milwaukee was that the city is socially and physically dissected into parts, and they look drasticall­y different from each other,” Samari says. “I found that really difficult to navigate because I like to have a lot of different types of people around me, different perspectiv­es, and it was hard to have that in the city.”

Samari wanted to do what she could to address that segregatio­n. After graduating from law school and spending almost four years in Afghanista­n designing criminal justice programs for the U.S. State Department, she decided to move back to Milwaukee in 2011 to start P3 Developmen­t Group with a former Marquette Law classmate, Genyne Edwards. P3 designs programs that promote diversity, equity and inclusion in nonprofits and other organizati­ons, including the Milwaukee Public Library and the Girl Scouts of Wisconsin. In 2017, she also helped launch Imagine MKE, an organizati­on that supports the arts in Milwaukee.

In 2020, Samari started a new project to help bridge the divide in Milwaukee through conversati­on. The Belonging Project, which later morphed into an app called Kin, paired Milwaukeea­ns across different perspectiv­es, often racial, for a series of six conversati­ons, the goal being greater understand­ing. Kin relaunched in October as Kin Universe, a national program. “At every level, we’re just trying to create impact,” Samari says. “The end goal is to shift the disparitie­s and improve people’s lives.”

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