
DABO launches free Community Empowerment Speaker Series
Clip: Season 52 Episode 24 | 11m 56sVideo has Closed Captions
Detroit Association of Black Organizations’ launches Community Empowerment Speaker Series.
The Detroit Association of Black Organizations (DABO) has launched a Community Empowerment Speaker Series with the aim to enlighten and energize Detroit residents. The free series features well-known speakers discussing critical issues that impact the Black community. Host Stephen Henderson talks with DABO CEO Rev. Horace Sheffield III about the series and getting out the vote in November.
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American Black Journal is a local public television program presented by Detroit PBS

DABO launches free Community Empowerment Speaker Series
Clip: Season 52 Episode 24 | 11m 56sVideo has Closed Captions
The Detroit Association of Black Organizations (DABO) has launched a Community Empowerment Speaker Series with the aim to enlighten and energize Detroit residents. The free series features well-known speakers discussing critical issues that impact the Black community. Host Stephen Henderson talks with DABO CEO Rev. Horace Sheffield III about the series and getting out the vote in November.
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We're gonna turn now to a community empowerment series, hosted by the Detroit Association of Black Organizations.
The event features appearances throughout the year by well-known speakers, performers, and thought leaders, who are focused on social change.
I sat down with the organization's CEO, Reverend Horace Sheffield, III, to learn more about this year's lineup and the goal of the series.
Reverend Horace Sheffield, III, always great to see you, welcome back to "American Black Journal".
- It's always good to reconnect, as our predecessors have- - Yeah, right.
- So do we.
(Stephen laughing) - That's right, that's right, your dad and my grandfather were- - Absolutely.
- Very close friends and associates.
- Absolutely, and one of the reasons that working people to this day receive a living wage.
- Yep, absolutely, absolutely, they did really critical work together.
- Yep.
- So tell me about DABO, before we get to what you're doing with DABO this year that's so critical.
- Well, we're doing a lot, we're breaking ground on the brand new community center on the corner of Kentucky and Grand River, so we've expanded our physical plant footprint.
We're also doing housing, we're doing recovery housing for veterans who have had a drug problem.
So we put them up in an environment that's away from where they, you know, did their drugs of choice.
We have a tremendous health program, a neighborhood health center, and we also have our own health clinic in our building where we are working with some major organizations.
We have an award-winning blood pressure control program that's been cited as the most successful in the world.
80 percent of our people reduce their blood pressure within two weeks and keep it there for over a year, through our program.
And Tom Frieden, the former director of CDC, has partnered with us, United Health Group, Wayne County government is now funding it in the out county areas, American Heart Association, so we're doing a lot of great work.
- Yeah, yeah.
And all of that is a nice backdrop, actually, those issues are a nice backdrop to this speaker series that you have going this year, given all of the critical choices that we're about to make in November, and of course the very big one at the top of the ballot, the Presidential election.
- Yeah, so I was blessed, you know, my sister, my younger sister, who's older than me, she was my youngest of three sisters, passed, and so how was I going to honor her or deal with the grief?
And I chose to buy a library, the old McGregor, the Gabriel Library, I'm sorry, on the corner of Grand River and Livernois.
Beautiful building, so many people have told me that they read there.
- Mm.
- And we put about $750,000 in that building, and if you haven't seen it, you need to see this, absolutely gorgeous and breathtaking.
Gonna give a shout out to Gary Turgo, who partnered with me to make that happen.
- Mhm.
- So, you know, we wanna do cultural things, so I decided to create the Community Empowerment Speaker Series.
I'll also let you know we also created the Community Music Series.
- Mhm.
- We've had Ezinma, Grammy Award-winning violinist, we've got Kayla Cox coming, who's the lead singer for SOS band, and then in October, Champagne King.
- Mhm.
- But the most important thing is how do we make critical decisions without the information we need?
So we launched this speaker series, we've had Jamal Bryant, we've had Dr. Cornell West, my professor, Michael Eric Dyson, we had the good pleasure of having Joe Madison come, before he passed.
- Mhm.
- And, in fact, he kinda kicked it off.
We have celebrity chef Ameer Natson, who cooks for Jay-Z, and that whole aggregation, Pharaoh.
So, and we've got some good people coming, we just had Jericka Duncan, the evening anchor of CBS news here.
- Mhm, mhm.
- Donnie Simpson will be here.
- Mhm.
- We've got, you know, Mumu Fresh, who's a award-winning, you know, cultural icon in the music industry.
And we do this absolutely free, Steve.
- Yeah, yeah.
So, first of all, that library is in the neighborhood where I was born, and The Tuxedo Project, which is the nonprofit I started in the home where I was living when I was born, is right around the corner from there.
And we looked at that library as a potential community space as well.
I was really glad to see you take it, because that meant you had to go raise the money to fix it, and not me.
(Stephen and Horace laughing) - Yeah, here's the good thing, man, I'm a person of faith, and there's never been a project that I started out with that I didn't have apprehension and trepidation.
I did not know how I was gonna do that.
- Yeah, yeah.
- Perfectly honest with you.
I mean, we're talking about $900,000, we purchased it and paid cash.
Roof, we've done everything in that building.
The windows were 86,000 because we wanted to put era tempered glass in there- - Yeah.
- So it didn't look like a modern building, I would never put glass block in the building like that.
- Yeah, yeah.
- We preserved the rafters.
The rafters were 106,000, because the building been closed for 12 years, no leaking.
- Wow, wow.
- But we had to absorb moisture out of those rafters, put grease in them, so they would take a stain.
I mean, you really had to come and look, but I'm glad to know that.
And if your Tuxedo Project needs a place to be situated.
- Yeah, right.
- We're happy to have you - We would love to use the space, yeah.
So, talk about the people you're bringing and the message that you're trying to sort of put out in our community this year, and why that's important in 2024.
- Well, let me just start with Roland Martin, who will be our last speaker in December, and the theme is telling our own story, right?
There's a whole variance now of perception about whether media can be trusted.
- Mhm.
- What the aim and purpose is of the messaging that we see.
And if you don't watch that with a critical eye, and then do some of your own research and verification of information, you could be led down a primrose path.
And so our goal is if we get people in, don't make them pay, allow them to ask questions, and have my speakers address specific things.
- Mhm.
- For example, Jamal Bryant, we've had him talk about, you know, is the church relevant anymore?
- Mm, mm.
- I mean, we gather, all these people gather every Sunday, but what is the impact of them coming?
I mean, if a little yeast leaven the whole loaf, what are they doing in their communities?
I mean, why aren't we leveraging millions of dollars, billions of dollars, that comes into the coffers of black church churches every Sunday- - Mhm.
- And redeveloping our neighborhoods?
So, the goal is to get people to faint.
Now, what we've done, and by the way, Michael Eric Dyson is our consultant on this, you know, I love the brother.
- Mhm.
- Is we're putting some kind of study guide together, post-presentation.
- Mm.
- With an action plan that each organization, or each person who comes, can go back and say, "As a result of hearing what Dr. Cornell West said."
You know, he's running for president, but I do agree we need to impact political parties more.
We don't leverage, there's no real impact of our aggregation.
Right?
- Right.
- There needs to be some demonstration of our aggregation and some compensation for our aggregation.
So those are the kinda things we're trying to do, not just a one day display where people come and hear something, and they feel good.
- Mm.
- They got a little tingling in their thinking, and they leave and go on about their business.
- Yeah, yeah.
So, the thing that occurs to me, that's a terribly important about this, is the concern that we have about Detroiters showing up this fall.
- Yeah.
- That we need people to feel like they matter, and that their voice matters.
- Mhm.
- And one way to get them to feel more like that is to make sure they're more informed about the choices that they're making.
- Sure.
Well, you know, my granddaughter does a commercial, you know, this ain't no joke, you gotta vote.
And I have a commercial I need to share with you, with my dad down in Selma organizing voters, and you can hear the protests and the singing, he's there with King, and he asked, "Well, how many people are eligible to register?"
And they say like, 30 some thousand, "Well, how many have we been able to register" "through this movement?"
Only 600 people.
Right?
- Mhm.
- And so, I figure like this, if we were registered to vote, we ain't gotta keep asking these white folks for something, we just gonna go up there and take it.
- Right.
- People have lost the connection between what they don't have.
- Mhm.
- And the exercise of their franchise.
Now, whether or not you vote Republican or Democrat, you know, that doesn't matter, but you have to vote.
Now, I think there's gonna be a difference in this election.
I think there's a sense of things brewing in Detroit, my good friend, primarily because I think a lot of folks feel that they've been left outta Detroit 2.0.
- Mm.
- This whole notion of super re-gentrification, I mean, on steroids.
(Stephen laughing) And whether or not the resources that have been pumped into this town have really gone to people who sustained this town, who never left.
That's not just black folks, that's Hispanic folks, and white people- - Sure, sure.
- Who've never left.
And I think as that conversation continues to ensue, that I'm finding more people who are understanding that we need to elect folks who are connected to some overall agenda that we can therefore hold them accountable for.
- Yeah.
- I'm encouraged.
- Yeah, you know, I hear a lot of people fretting about turnout and I think the combination of the reforms that have been made, that have made voting way easier.
- Mhm.
- And the things you're talking about, I think we could actually end up with a very good turnout in Detroit, and maybe a record turnout in the state, which is what we wanna see.
- Well, Mike Epps, my business partner, is coming in the third weekend of July, from a Thursday to a Sunday, and we're doing seven shows at one mic.
But what we're also gonna do, and I'm working with my daughter and some other folks, a good clerk, who by the way, interpreted the law, so now you don't have to apply for an absentee ballot every time.
- Right.
- Is to go and have some community crawls, where we go into neighborhoods like Dexter and Elmhurst, or wherever.
- Mhm.
- And we set up shop, and we have people registering folks, I mean, Mike will draw people.
He's talking about bringing some other people with him.
- Yeah.
- I mean, whatever it takes.
We did this when I was much younger with the Jackson Five, and some people who worked in the Carter administration, and we registered like 50,000 people at concerts.
- Wow, wow.
- We gotta go where people are.
- Yes.
- And then, more importantly, we gotta be true to our word and come back to them and show them what impact we've had.
- Yeah.
- Primarily due to their participation.
- Yeah, yeah.
Okay, Reverend Horace Sheffield, III, always great to catch up with you and great to hear about this series- - All this is on the website, www.dabodetroitinc.com, www.dabodetroitinc.com.
The speaker series, the entertainment series, come out and join us.
- All for free, all for free.
- All for free, it's free to get in, but the price is your butt in the seat.
(Stephen laughing) - That's right.
All right, thanks for being with us - All right, thank you, my brother.
‘Tiff Massey: 7 Mile + Livernois’ exhibit at the DIA
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A new exhibit at the Detroit Institute of Arts pays homage to Black Detroiters’ culture. (9m 59s)
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