Unity is wealth
Unity is Wealth is a branding, marketing, micro-finance social enterprise that leverages technology to economically empower under resourced communities.
RP
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IJS… 🙌🏾
02/09/2026
African culture sits at the heart of Latin music. It is Black history. The rhythms that move salsa, reggaeton, merengue, cumbia, rumba and so much more trace back to Africa, carried across the Atlantic through enslavement, survival, and resistance. The drums, the call-and-response, the tumbao that drives the music forward all come from African traditions that have never disappeared.
And yet, across the diaspora, there is still a disconnect. Some don’t feel an immediate connection to Latin music, not because the roots aren’t shared, but because the history tying us together has been fragmented or erased. In the U.S., Black American history is often taught as separate from Afro-Caribbean and Afro-Latin history, as if these stories exist in isolation rather than as parts of the same ancestral journey. At the same time, Latin music is frequently presented without acknowledging its Black origins, making the culture feel distant instead of familiar.
When that context is missing, appreciation becomes harder. But when the history is centered, something shifts. The music no longer feels foreign, it feels recognizable. Reconnecting these stories isn’t just about understanding sound it’s about restoring memory, honoring Africa’s global influence, and bridging a diaspora that was never meant to be divided in the first place.
We remember artists like Celia Cruz who unapologetically centered their African identity through music, using song as both celebration and resistance. Cruz didn’t just perform Afro-Cuban rhythms she named them, honored them, and brought Santería, Yoruba traditions, into global view at a time when Blackness was often muted or erased in Latin music. Alongside artists like Willie Colón and Rubén Blades, Afro-Latin musicians used lyrics, percussion, and storytelling to affirm African lineage, working-class Black communities, and diasporic struggle. Their music made it clear that Afro-Latin identity wasn’t a footnote to Latin culture it was central to it, carried proudly in sound, spirit, and history.
Black History is global.
RP
02/04/2026
Happy BHM!!!
02/02/2026
Guess what month it is…..
✊🏾
If you are in need of groceries and are worried about the loss of SNAP or WIC benefits following the government shutdown…
Here is one resource that few people know about that can help you get free food monthly!
Imagine being from a culture so rich in history you can drop a pin in any era and be amazed. Step back into the spotlight of the 1930s and 40s, where the **Berry Brothers** reigned as kings of rhythm. Long before tap was polished into Broadway tradition, these three brothers—Warren, Nyas, and James—were electrifying audiences with moves so daring they seemed impossible.
They weren’t just dancers; they were innovators. Their trademark? Leaping into **full splits from mid-air**, then bouncing right back up without missing a beat. Harlem’s Cotton Club couldn’t get enough. Hollywood came calling, and soon they were sharing the silver screen with the biggest names of the day.
The Berry Brothers pushed tap beyond syncopation—they turned it into a high-wire act of precision and athleticism. Their performances blurred the line between acrobatics and dance, proving that Black artistry could be both dangerous and dazzling.
When we talk about pioneers who shaped the future of performance, their name belongs beside the greats. They weren’t just performers, they were a spectacle. And their influence? You can still see it echo in today’s choreography.
**Legends aren’t always remembered as loudly as they deserve—but the Berry Brothers danced in a language of fire, and that rhythm still burns.**
Gotta be proud to be a Black American!
RIP Assata Shakur 🌹. A brief history lesson from 🔥👏🏿:
Source:
05/01/2022
Today’s gone be a good one! We got a host of Houston artist performing and participating in todays art festival from music to fashion to creative expression in general! Come enjoy yourself, 1st drinks on
02/26/2022
The biggest flex!!! 💪🏽💪🏽 What was the last book you read or encouraged the youth to read?
We’re just so naturally dope! We can’t help it! Drop a 🖤 if you agree 🙌🏽
Tell me you go to an HBCU without saying you go to an HBCU!
01/25/2021
Tonight: Business Development Series - https://mailchi.mp/40b3c77c58f3/tonight-business-development-series-9467841
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