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Nestled in the historic Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood of Brooklyn, the Akwaaba Mansion is a bed and breakfast that provides luxury lodging while honoring Afrocentric culture. The 1860s Victorian home stands out as a landmark, offering guests a unique blend of elegance and cultural reverence.
With four uniquely decorated bedrooms, cozy private baths, a glass-enclosed sun porch, and other amenities, the Akwaaba Mansion caters to every visitor’s need.
“You know you’re walking into a mansion,” says Innkeeper and Director of Operations Randy Fraser. “Almost like they’re expecting a grand person—and we are. We’re expecting our guests and we consider them royalty, and treat them as such.
“We hope when they come, they feel luxurious, and [that] it’s okay to spend some time away from home in a beautiful space.”
Video by Leah Mallory
Laura Pegram, who has been visiting Akwaaba for nearly 25 years, echoed this sentiment.
“When you walk into Akwaaba, you feel spoiled from the second you step through the door,” she said. “You feel as if this is a haven for luxury; your every need is met before you even articulate it. Music greets you the second you walk in. I always think I’m home. The moment we walk through the door, we feel this peace. If there were stressors that impacted you prior to your arrival, it all falls away.”
Central to the experience at Akwaaba Mansion is its design, which features Afrocentric artifacts and elements.
Interior photos courtesy of Akwaaba Mansion (Leah Mallory photos)
“When our guests come, if they happen to be African American, they really can identify cues that reflect who they are, and make them feel seen,” said Monique Greenwood, CEO of the Akwaaba Mansion. “Those could be things like the mud-cloth lamp cover, a throw that has African art in it, or a mix of books we tend to put around. It gives people a sense of this being a place where you’re celebrated and not just tolerated. And for those not of the culture, they see beauty, and that works as well.”
Greenwood said that the name Akwaaba itself—which means “welcome” in Twi, one of four major dialects of the Akan people—holds cultural significance.
“I chose the name because it’s lyrical and has that cultural reference,” she said.
“As soon as I step through the door, I feel at home and welcomed. It’s almost as if I move into a sanctuary of sorts, where I’m surrounded by objects that help me feel more inspired,” said Pegram.
For Greenwood, Akwaaba represents an escape from life’s stressors, and a place to form connections.
“Once they walk in these doors, they can leave the rest of the world outside,” she said. “It is a serene space, a space that allows you to find yourself again, and there’s so many people who need that.”
With its unique combination of antique Italianate features and African influence, the Black-owned bed and breakfast collection is redefining the perception of luxury – making the experience truly one of a kind.
Rev. Al Sharpton, Founder and President of National Action Network (NAN), led a memorial service for Attorney Michael Hardy, the organization’s longtime General Counsel and Executive Vice President, who passed away last month at 69. The service was held Thursday at First Corinthian Baptist Church in Harlem
New York City and State officials including Attorney General Letitia James, City Council Speaker Adrienne Adams, and U.S. Attorney for the Southern District Damien Williams were among those expected to attend the service.
“Michael Hardy left an unparalleled legal legacy in the civil rights movement that will be felt from coast to coast for generations to come,” said Sharpton, Founder and President of NAN. “It is only fitting that the entire National Action Network and those he impacted come together to recognize his life, his work, and the profound change he made on this nation. While we continue to mourn his loss, we will celebrate the legacy Michael Hardy left on this organization and this nation.”
Hardy was essential to the founding of NAN with. Sharpton in 1991. Hardy advised Sharpton on legal strategy around police shootings, from Amadou Diallo in the 1990s to George Floyd in 2020.
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Haiti Air Ambulance (HAA) is an established New York-based 501(c)(3) non-profit. Since 2014 has been the only charity helicopter air ambulance service dedicated to serving the 11.4 million people of Haiti. “Over 40% of its patients are pregnant mothers and newborns.“ Over the past decade, Haiti Air Ambulance has flown over 2,000 missions, triaging, treating and…
The number of skilled nurses leaving the profession each year has been called a national healthcare crisis, but the exodus will have a disproportionate impact on Black communities.
Burned out after the COVID-19 pandemic and frustrated with systemic problems in healthcare, nurses in the U.S. are leaving the medical profession in droves, a quiet exodus that some are calling a national crisis.
But—as usual—a crisis in America is a catastrophe for Black America. Experts say the situation will exacerbate the lack of access to care for communities of color, increase the time it will take to get routine as well as urgent or specialized medical attention and further widen the health gap between Black and white patients.
The situation is considered so dire that the White House last August announced it had earmarked some $100 million through the Department of Health and Human Services to quickly grow the nation’s corps of nurses. At the same time, colleges, universities and teaching hospitals that specialize in nurse training are offering accelerated programs to get caregivers on the job as soon as possible.
“Nurses are an essential part of our nation’s health care system,” HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra said in a statement rolling out the Grow the Nursing Workforce grant program. “Now more than ever, we need to double down on our investments in nurses who care for communities across the country.”
Deborah Trautman, president and CEO of the American Association of Colleges of Nursing, said that generating “strong interest in nursing careers, and training new nurses” are top priorities for stakeholders like her organization.
“Maintaining a healthy supply of practice-ready nurses is critical to ensuring access to essential patient care services and protecting the nation’s health,” she said in April.
Experts say the overall nurse shortage stems from a combination of factors—chiefly, the COVID-19 pandemic, which called on nurses to work long hours in a highly-charged, uncertain environment. But others point to more mundane, long-term issues frustrating the workforce: poor working conditions, relatively low pay, high caseloads, and lack of support from hospital management.
For Black nurses, the issues also include racial bias on the job. Black Nurses are almost twice as likely to report racism on the job—bigotry, slurs, a patient’s refusal of treatment—than white nurses.
Why Black nurses matter
According to data from the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, there are only nine registered nurses on average for every 1,000 people. And only 6.7% of registered nurses are Black, even though Black people make up around 13% of the U.S. population.
Black nurses matter because multiple studies confirm Black patients are more likely to seek out care, follow instructions and have better overall health outcomes if their caregiver looks like them.
Research shows that patients who are of the same race as their healthcare provider have better outcomes. These improvements range from significant declines in Black infant mortality and an approximately 19% drop in mortality rates for Black men.
Black patients and patients of color also were more likely to get preventative care when their clinician shares their racial background. And 83% of Black mental health providers believe racial concordance is important to patient outcomes, according to the Journal of Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities.
But nurses are heading for the exits in droves.
A 2022 national workforce survey of almost 335,000 registered nurses, licensed practical nurses, and licensed vocational nurses found that more than 25% of them were planning to leave the profession by 2027, through retirements as well as resignations, according to the National Council of State Boards of Nursing.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) predicts that between 2022 and 2032, the country will see 193,100 openings for registered nurses each year. But the actual workforce, according to the BLS, will likely increase by 177,400 each year.
However, there was one bright spot amid all the data: Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) are overperforming when it comes to nursing education. Only 2% of all colleges and universities are HBCUs but as of 2017 they had graduated almost 7% of nursing-school graduates.
Black patients are also more likely to pursue preventative care when their healthcare provider is Black. And a whopping 83% of Black mental health providers say this racial concordance is important to care outcomes.
Legacy of discrimination
Yet, more than 40% of nurses said they experienced racism or discrimination while in nursing school, with nearly 80% of nurses calling for more diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) training in nursing education, according to a 2023 Robert Wood Johnson survey and interviews of nearly 1,000 nurses.
A combined 44% of respondents reported that racism or discrimination was part of their nursing school’s culture to some extent.
There’s evidence that the profession is trying to address racism within its ranks.
“If we are to truly provide just and equitable care to our patients, we as nurses must hold ourselves accountable for our own behavior and work to change the systems that perpetuate racism and other forms of discrimination, said Beth Toner, RH, the foundation’s director of program communications.
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The Mayor’s Office of Immigrant Affairs (MOIA) Commissioner Manuel Castro and the NYC Department of Social Services (DSS) Commissioner Molly Park have released two Requests. The requests are for Proposals (RFx) to establish 25 MOIA Immigration Legal Support Centers and MOIA Legal Technical Mentorship programs citywide. “New York City is committed to supporting our immigrant…