Page 4 July 15, 2015 Jamilah Bourdon plates a free breakfast for local students as part of a grassroots effort to empower and support Portland’s black community. Empowering Lives C ONTINUED FROM F RONT Showdogs is a full service salon. We do baths, all over hair cuts, tooth brushing, QDLOWULPVVRIWFODZVÀHDWUHDWPHQWVPXG baths, and ear cleaning. We also have health care and grooming products to keep your pet clean in between visits. Show Dogs Grooming Salon & Boutique 926 N. Lombard Portland, OR 97217 503-283-1177 Tuesday-Saturday 9am-7pm Monday 10am-4pm Yo dawg is gonna look like a show dawg and your kitty will be pretty. About seven Portland orga- nizers with the All African party took up the call and started a free breakfast program this past year in the New Columbia neighborhood of north Portland, bringing chil- dren food and offering lessons in sustainability and activism on a rotating basis. During the school year the program fed about 25 stu- dents per day, but over the sum- mer the program has expanded its hours, allowing parents to have relief from caretaking while chil- dren take some time out of their day to learn aspects of African his- tory, food growth, and grassroots community building. Organizer jamilah bourdon (who prefers her name in all low- er case, like bell hooks) has been involved with the organization for about a year and a half and says she is happy with the program. “The work that we are doing is to make sure that not only are these kids’ bellies full, but to en- courage them and remind them that they are important,” she said. “We are teaching kids about VHOIVXI¿FLHQF\ DQG VHOIGHIHQVH It’s not just physical defense. It’s the ability to defend your commu- nity and yourself with education and history and providing for your community on your terms.” Adrienne Cabouet, another organizer for the All African par- ty, who is also active with Black Lives Matter, explained how it’s important to counter the erasure of African history from general edu- cation. “We have to create a system stronger than white supremacy,” she said. “It’s about divesting from systems that oppress you and creating things that serve your community that you build,” she said. The All-African People’s Rev- olutionary Party, which bills itself as a pan-African socialist organi- zation that connects all people of African-descent for collective ed- XFDWLRQ DQG D XQL¿HG$IULFD KDV its headquarters in Guinea-Bis- sau. The Oregon chapter, which is based in Portland, opened up in 2013. Organizers of the New Colum- bia free breakfast program say their goal now is to ensure that it will be become self-sustaining and that other communities can run their own breakfast programs wherever they are needed. “The cause continues long after the leader is gone,” said bourdon. “One day, we hope the children who are eating now might feed other children; that they will feel this project, and this community, belongs to them just like their his- tory does.” Both organizers we spoke with suggested that, if others saw val- ue in what they were doing, they would consider opening up free breakfast programs in their own communities, and that it was im- portant to them that people be in charge of their own organizing. Those who are interested in ei- ther donating to the current New Columbia breakfasts or starting their own are encouraged to vis- it aaprporegon.org or like their )DFHERRN SDJH DW IDFHERRNFRP SDJHV$OO$IULFDQ3HRSOHV5HY- olutionary-Party-Portland-Or- HJRQ 7KH group is also accepting new back- to-school supply donations for students at the moment as well, including backpacks, notepads, writing implements, and calcula- tors. Donations for food to the free breakfast program can be dropped off at the organization’s commu- nity meeting location, In Other Words Bookstore, 14 N.E Killing- sworth St. The breakfast program currently runs on Mondays and Fridays from 8 to 10 a.m. at Co- lumbia International Cup Coffee Shop at 9022 N. Newman Ave. In September, the program returns to its school year schedule of 7 to 8 a.m. on Mondays and Fridays.