RE community enjoys Black History Month Celebration
Whether clapping, foot-tapping or dancing to the beat of a Bahamian junkanoo band, a Trinidadian steel drummer or a marching band from South Dade Senior High, RE's faculty, staff and students enjoyed the rhythms of Black History Month Celebrations on both campuses. They also visited art and jewelry displays, author tables and hair-braiding booths, and enjoyed African/Caribbean cuisine prepared by Sage Dining.
The Feb. 15 event at the upper school and Feb. 24 celebration at the middle school commenced with the Buccaneer Marching Band of South Dade Senior High, which performed on the Stamps Family Field and in the Mendelson Plaza. Stilt dancers and the junkanoo band also entertained, and Garfield Joseph, a Trinidad native, played the steel drum in the middle school quad and by the Raider statue at the upper school.
Booths of a mini-arts festival lined the middle school quad and the Ansin Breezeway, both of which were decorated with Black History Month signs and flags. Authors Emmanuel Elize Norestin and Rockell Bartoli shared their works. Hair salon owner Lakeisha Jackson braided students' hair. The jewelry company Grain of Sand by Aneth offered African necklace making. Art work from Black artists was on display. There was a Miami Heat photo gallery.
Chef Alfredo Silva and his team from Sage Dining offered jerk chicken and roast pork loin with South African peri-peri sauce, African pilau masala rice, Jamaican coconut-curry tofu and African gumbo and Algerian vegetable (bouktouf) soup.
Middle school students enjoy a performance by the marching band from South Dade Senior High
COO and Head of the Upper School David Clark '86, Director of Inclusion and Community Engagement Wendell Graham '74 and Interim Head of School Rachel Rodriguez
Marching band from South Dade Senior High at the upper school
Author Emmanuel Elize Norestin shared his works
RE students love the Buccaneer Marching Band
Marching band from South Dade Senior High
Students enjoy the Miami Heat photo display
Trinidadian steel drummer and Santi Sauceda '24
Art and jewelry displays; author tables and a hair-braiding booth filled the breezeway
Marching band from South Dade Senior High
Students and faculty enjoyed various performances
Art and jewelry displays; author tables and a hair-braiding booth filled the breezeway
Marching band from South Dade Senior High
Trinidadian steel drummer and Admission Associate Carla Hill
Dancing to the beat of a Bahamian junkanoo band
Marching band from South Dade Senior High
Dancing to the beat of a Bahamian junkanoo band
Marching band from South Dade Senior High
Author Rockell Bartoli shared herworks
Grain of Sand by Aneth offered African necklace making
Hair salon owner Lakeisha Jackson braided students' hair
Faculty member Karina Buhler with middle school students Gillian Carvalho '29, Sydney Forrester '29 and Faith Simmons '29
Grain of Sand by Aneth offered African necklace making at the middle school
Hair salon owner Lakeisha Jackson braided middle school students' hair
Garfield Joseph, a Trinidad native, gave steel drum lessons at the middle school
Marching band from South Dade Senior High performed at the middle school
Bahamian junkanoo band and stilt dancers at the middle school
Stilt dancers wow the middle school community
Stilt dancers at the middle school
Stilt dancer entertain middle school students
Booths, treats and stilt dancers in the middle school quad
Some of the middle school parent organizers for this special celebration. L-R: Kareem Brantley P'29, Claudine Forrester P'29, Shanne Forrester P'29, Marion Mason (Simon Pietersen art presenter), Angella Carvalho P'26 '29 (BHM organizer), Bridjette Hoilett Green P'25, Aneth Lusardi (jeweler/owner, Grain of Sand by Aneth, presenter) and Kimberly Davis P'28
RE English teacher Shaida Escoffery Whitley and her family performed at the middle school celebration
Middle school parents joined the celebration
Garfield Joseph, a Trinidad native, encourage students to try the steel drum
Founded in 1903, Ransom Everglades School is a coeducational, college preparatory day school for grades 6 - 12 located on two campuses in Coconut Grove, Florida. Ransom Everglades School produces graduates who "believe that they are in the world not so much for what they can get out of it as for what they can put into it." The school provides rigorous college preparation that promotes the student's sense of identity, community, personal integrity and values for a productive and satisfying life, and prepares the student to lead and to contribute to society.