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 Marcia Pendelton
Photo by D'Ambrose Boyd

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+ My Soul To Keep
+ Annual Fort Greene, Brooklyn Juneteenth Festival

Annual Fort Greene, Brooklyn Juneteenth Festival

2007 Festival Description
2007 Festival Schedule

The Cooperative Culture Collective presents
the 7th Annual Fort Greene, Brooklyn Juneteenth Festival

Saturday, June 16, 2007
12 Noon to 6:00 pm
Cuyler Gore Park
Fulton Street & Carlton Avenue
Fort Greene, Brooklyn

For more information
Junefest@walktallgirlproductions.com

THE HISTORY OF THE ANNUAL FORT GREENE,
BROOKLYN JUNETEENTH FESTIVAL

June 19, 1865 is the date that slaves in Texas and other parts of the South learned about their freedom, which happened nearly two years after the Emancipation Proclamation. This occasion became known as "Juneneeth" and has been acknowledged with community celebrations throughout the South for nearly 140 years.

The Annual Fort Greene, Brooklyn Juneteenth Festival began in 2000 as a day long in-store event at 4W Circle of Art and Enterprise under the leadership of  4W collective member and fashion designer Brenda Brunson Bey (Tribal Truths Collection). Bey, a native of Georgia, grew up participating in Juneteenth festivities and established the 4W Circle celebration because few Brooklyn residents knew about the vastly important but little known moment in American History.

One year later Bey recruited other artists and entrepreneurs living and working in Brooklyn to help move the celebration outside and into the community. This core of people included Spring McClendon (Nationwide Insurance), Selma Jackson (4W Circle of Art and Enterprise), Marcia Pendelton (Walk Tall Girl Productions) and Charles Reese (Teeth and Eyes Communications). The group formed The Cooperative Culture Collective (TCCC), an organization founded to grow the festival and to produce other programs commemorating the arts and culture of the African Diaspora.

Funding from such organizations as the Brooklyn Arts Council, BAM Local Development Corporation, Fulton First and Rush Philanthropic Foundation enabled the festival to move from 4W Circle to Cuyler Core Park Park (Carlton Avenue and Fulton Street) in 2001. That celebration included an entertainment stage, pony rides, face painting and games, as well as information tables from arts, business and service organizations. In 2002, TCCC added another day of programming to the Juneteenth Festival by hosting a community reception at Lafayette Avenue Presbyterian Church, a stop on the Underground Railroad. Two years later TCCC created the "Juneteenth Uplift Award" to honor Brooklyn citizens whose life and work exemplified the spirit of Juneteenth. Author/activist Kevin Powell and artist/activist Miriam B. Francis were the first recipients.

The Annual Fort Greene, Brooklyn Juneteenth Festival, which is held the third Saturday in June, has presented nationally renowned artists as well as community-based talents. These performers have included Grammy Award winning singer/songwriter Gordon Chambers, Grammy nominated jazz vocalist Carla Cook, such outstanding dance ensembles as Urban Bush Women and Creative Outlet Dance Theater of Brooklyn, acclaimed musicians Benny Russell and Tulani Kinard, and the Carter G. Woodson Steppers, a youth service organization.

The goal of TCCC is to continue to educate Brooklyn residents specifically, and the five borough area generally, about the history and importance of Juneteenth through the festival and other related programs. In addition, the vision of TCCC includes making the annual festival a destination event that will attract visitors from all over the world, thereby contributing to Brooklyn's economy and its reputation as a place where the arts and culture flourish.

About The Cooperative Culture Collective

Founded by Brenda Brunson Bey, Selma Jackson, Spring McClendon, Charles Reese, and Marcia Pendelton, The Cooperative Culture Collective is a Brooklyn-based collaboration between African American artists and African American small businesses; coupled with the local communities as well as the merging and growing businesses and artists in the evolving cultural districts of Fort Greene, Clinton Hills, Bedford Stuyvesant and Prospect Heights. The mission of the collective is to develop, produce and promote lesser known African American influenced celebrations and festivals to enhance cultural and educational awareness;  stimulate economic growth for businesses in the communities; and provide a local and national platform for established and emerging artists.

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