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We Be Griots

Podcast af Silver Hollow Audio

engelsk

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A "griot" is a West African storyteller who preserves the genealogies, historical narratives, and oral traditions of their people. Host Esi Lewis created the Dr. Margaret Wade-Lewis Center for Black History and Culture, in New Paltz, NY, to share local Black history. Dr. Wade-Lewis loved people, education, and language. Join us to hear personal narratives of the Black community. We Be Griots is made in collaboration with Episcopal Campus Ministries, and the SUNY New Paltz Department of Digital Media and Journalism. Audio Producer: Brett Barry; Consulting Producer: Allison Moore

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8 episoder

episode Esi Lewis with Clark Love Lewis cover

Esi Lewis with Clark Love Lewis

In this special season 1 finale of We Be Griots, host Clark Love Lewis interviews her mother, Esi Marjorie Lewis — founder and executive director of the Margaret Wade Lewis Center for History and Culture — about her remarkable life journey and the legacy of the Lewis family in New Paltz, New York. About Esi Lewis Born in 1980 and raised in New Paltz, Esi grew up immersed in academic and community life at SUNY New Paltz, where her mother, Dr. Margaret Wade Lewis, was a pioneering professor. After graduating from New York Military Academy (1997) and Hampton University (2001), Esi went on to earn her law degree in Boston (2005). She served as an Assistant District Attorney in Brooklyn for six years before returning to the Hudson Valley, where she has worn many hats: educator, family law attorney, criminal justice instructor, chief diversity officer for Ulster County, and now full-time executive director of the Margaret Wade Lewis Center. About the Margaret Wade Lewis Center The Center was born from Esi's effort to preserve the Ann Oliver House — built by Jacob Wynkoop, one of the first men on record to be born free in New Paltz following gradual emancipation. The Center carries on the legacy of Dr. Margaret Wade Lewis by preserving and sharing Black history in the New Paltz community. About Dr. Margaret Wade Lewis Dr. Margaret Wade Lewis was a linguist, educator, and community pillar at SUNY New Paltz. She earned her PhD from New York University — the first Black woman to receive a doctorate in linguistics from that institution — and authored a book on the Gullah language. She passed away in 2009. Topics Covered * Growing up in New Paltz in the 1980s and '90s * A discouraging guidance counselor, and how her family responded * Attending Hampton University, an HBCU, and its significance * Her legal career as an assistant district attorney in Brooklyn * The founding of the Margaret Wade Lewis Center and the story of the Ann Oliver House * Memories of her mother, Dr. Margaret Wade Lewis, and her father, David Lewis * Lessons in parenting, community, and lifelong learning * A conversation with young Clark about school, dance, gymnastics, and her future dreams Resources Visit the Margaret Wade Lewis Center at mwlcenter.org [https://www.mwlcenter.org] Credits Audio Producer: Brett Barry | Consulting Producer: Allison Moore | Production Interns: Sierra DeVito and Marietou Sacko | A collaboration with Episcopal Campus Ministries and the SUNY New Paltz Department of Digital Media and Journalism Stay tuned for Season 2!

12. maj 2026 - 14 min
episode Brenda Hush cover

Brenda Hush

In this episode, host Esi Lewis sits down with Brenda Hush, a longtime New Paltz community member with a rich and varied life story. Brenda shares her upbringing in Chester, New York — a tight-knit, multigenerational neighborhood she describes as a "Norman Rockwell life" — and takes us through the many chapters of her journey. Brenda reflects on living in Virginia Beach and Lexington Park, Maryland during her first husband's Navy service in the Vietnam era, offering candid memories of navigating segregation in the South. She discusses her time as a student at SUNY New Paltz in the early seventies — including a formative class with the late Dr. Margaret Wade Lewis — and how she eventually returned to New Paltz permanently in 1996, purchasing Dr. Lewis's own condo after graduating with her sociology degree in 2000. Brenda's career path took her from 18 years as a metallurgist technician at IBM — where she successfully sued the company for racial discrimination and sexual harassment — to work as a youth counselor and corrections counselor at Harlem Valley Secure, Brookwood Secure, and Walkill Correctional Facility, a role she calls "the best job ever." Brenda also opens up about her Native American heritage as a member of the Ramapo Lenape Nation, her brother's role as a sub-chief, and the tribe's blocked effort to gain federal recognition — an effort reportedly opposed by Donald Trump over casino competition concerns. Throughout the conversation, Brenda touches on her faith and 25-plus years at an Episcopal church in New Paltz, her lifetime membership and chaplaincy with the local VFW post, her involvement with the Chester Alumni Association and Historical Society, and her work beautifying New Paltz through the Garden Club. We Be Griots is produced in collaboration with Episcopal Campus Ministries and the SUNY New Paltz Department of Digital Media and Journalism. Consulting Producer: Allison Moore | Audio Producer: Brett Barry | Production Interns: Sierra DeVito and Marietou Sacko | Host: Esi Lewis "We Be Griots" is the title of a poem by Ulster County's first Poet Laureate, Kate Hymes Flanagan.

28. apr. 2026 - 23 min
episode Esther Val cover

Esther Val

In this episode, host Esi Lewis sits down with her friend and colleague Esther Val, a Financial Aid Advisor, adjunct faculty member, and staff member of the Scholars Mentorship Program (SMP) at SUNY New Paltz. The conversation is warm, honest, and wide-ranging — covering Esther's upbringing, her winding road through higher education, and the community she's built at New Paltz. Esther shares what it meant to grow up as a first-generation Haitian American in Brooklyn — never quite fitting into either the Haitian or American community, but finding belonging in church and music. Her mother's career as a home health aide and her father's entrepreneurial spirit (he founded a church in New Rochelle and a school for underprivileged students in Haiti) clearly shaped who she became: someone who loves people and shows up for them. Her path through higher education was anything but traditional. Esther was honest that it took her 13 years to earn both her bachelor's and master's degrees while raising young children — and that it was a single professor who stopped and asked "How are you really doing?" that turned everything around. That moment planted the seed for who she is today on campus. Since joining SUNY New Paltz in 2015, Esther has built a life well beyond her financial aid office. She teaches for the Scholars Mentorship Program, a program she describes with genuine pride — particularly its remarkable 93% student retention rate. She's also a faculty advisor for Voices of Unity (VOU), the campus gospel choir founded by Daryl Ware, who has since returned as director. This spring, VOU is planning a full production on the history of gospel music. The conversation also touches on changes Esther has witnessed at New Paltz over the years — the arrival of the university's first Black president, the student-led push to rename campus buildings, and her hope to see the Black student population grow beyond its current 6%. Looking ahead, she's quietly considering a move to full-time teaching as the next chapter of her career. Quote of the Episode "You have to be willing to be uncomfortable, and allow other people to be uncomfortable — because it's the only way real change is going to come about." — Esther Val About We Be Griots A Griot is a West African storyteller who preserves the oral traditions and histories of their people. Created by Esi Lewis, Executive Director of the Dr. Margaret Wade Lewis Center for History and Culture, We Be Griots shares local Black history told by Black people. Produced in collaboration with Episcopal Campus Ministries and the SUNY New Paltz Department of Digital Media and Journalism. Consulting Producer: Allison Moore | Audio Producer: Brett Barry | Production Interns: Sierra DeVito and Marietou Sacko.

14. apr. 2026 - 29 min
episode Eddie Bell cover

Eddie Bell

In this episode, host Esi Lewis sits down with Ed Bell, a retired Assistant Vice Chancellor of Student Affairs at SUNY New Paltz, where he worked for twenty years. Ed shares the remarkable story of how he came to New Paltz in 1967 with a singular mission: to build a track program from the ground up — recruiting athletes, purchasing equipment, and working with architects to construct the track itself. His teams went on to win city and regional championships and competed at the Penn Relays in Philadelphia, making their mark in a SUNY system that was, at the time, overwhelmingly white. Ed reflects on the vibrant Black community that existed in and around New Paltz during his years there — one that included IBM professionals, educators, artists, and Greek life members — and how that community actively supported one another through organizations like Concerned Parents. He also shares memories of his close friendship with printmaker and artist Ben Wigfall, his first friend in New Paltz, and speaks warmly about raising his family in the area. Ed's life story stretches from a childhood split between a small all-white Illinois town and the bustling neighborhoods of Queens, to attending Tennessee State University during the era of segregation, to later traveling to Japan, France, and Cuba. Ed is also an accomplished poet — a passion rooted in his grandmother, a poet herself who read her work to him after his mother passed away when he was just two and a half years old. He shares the story of how a visit to the White House in the 1990s moved him to write a letter to President Clinton advocating for Black art in the permanent collection — a letter that directly contributed to the acquisition of the first work by an African American artist, Henry Ossawa Tanner, into that collection. Ed closes the episode with two powerful readings from his latest collection, Undulations, including the stirring poem "We're Still Here."

31. mar. 2026 - 37 min
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