However, Tanisha’s driver-Bandar, however, took a final step at the Maya Angelo element in Harvey, when the 37-year-old returned to donate a demonstration for the Black History Month on Wednesday, she was congratulated as if she never never Was left
Driver-Bandar and his sister, Velvet driver, veteran Special Education Teacher Karen Moore and Assistant Principal Joi Lewis, as they walked through the Nondscript main entrance.
The sisters came to Moore and Lewis about the donation idea in the hope of helping a school, which provided them with the foundation of tight-making community and cultural pride.
The driver-barnder told me about the students and faculty found in Maya Angelo, “They proud to be black.” “We had black teachers. We studied Black History – the Black History Program was the most important thing for us. ,
The program, which will be held on 26 February in a dedicated school assembly, will include the performance of driver-bend as well as students cultural performances. Parents and members of the school community will be invited.
The driver-bend runs an event company, and he designed the display together along with all black history materials. She was capable of printing big signals in her brother’s print shop in South Holland, Supreme Merchas.
The performance material was launched in a massive vacant library of the school on Wednesday through the first floor of Maya Angelo, where the brothers -in -law started installing signals for more than 200 students of primary school to see the whole month. Gave.
One of the designed driver-bends includes spots of information on important historical figures such as James Baldwin, Langston Hughes and Barack Obama. Other informative signals were dedicated to students to educate their school names, poets and civil rights activists on Maya Angelo.
The driver-barnder came after a year with the idea of making a performance for Angelo, when the school was asked to create a black history art, his children participated in Kankeke. From there, she said that she continues to create more and more art spread throughout the school.
After a recent change in the administration of his district, he saw the opportunity to help in his old primary school this year.
“They are just so helpful and grateful, and I could not be more happy,” the driver-barnder said in the school library. “I am very full now.”
As the driver-barnder spoke about her vision about the performance situation in the library, she was already thinking what else she could do next year. He said that the Black History Month is no longer widely celebrated because it was when he was a child, considering other occasions to be proud of black culture and black culture, time a special place in his heart Keeps what he wants to experience children.
“I honestly believe that if you install it when you are small, they won’t forget it-it’s like how it was with us,” the driver-barnder said pointing to his sister. “It is important to continue it.”