REMOVING THE MASK, AMPLIFYING OUR VOICES

Flyer posted widely on social media. Services provided by Ms. Afrika Abney 


For more information write to aachildrenslit2023@gmail.com. 

From January 29, 2024 - February 5, 2024, Ms. Afrika Abney promoted the panel discussion entitled: REMOVING THE MASK, AMPLIFYING OUR VOICES: The Struggle of Black Authors to Get Their Stories For Children Depicting Authentic African American Life, History and Culture Published By Mainstream Companies via email and on social media.



9:30 am- REMOVING THE MASK, AMPLIFYING OUR VOICES: The Struggle of Black Authors to Get Their Stories For Children Depicting Authentic African American Life, History and Culture Published By Mainstream Companies PRESENTERS: Carolivia Herron, Wynn Yarbrough, and Bernard Demczuk 


"Car­o­livia Her­ron is a retired pro­fes­sor of com­par­a­tive lit­er­a­ture who directs the Epic­Cen­ter­ing the Nation­al Mall cre­ative writ­ing pro­gram for at risk youth. She is best known as the author of the chil­dren’s book Nap­py Hair. She is a speak­er with the Pen Faulkn­er Writ­ers in Schools pro­gram, an African Amer­i­can Jew, and an active mem­ber of Tifer­eth Israel of Wash­ing­ton, DC."


"Wynn Yarbrough teaches Creative Writing and Children's Literature at the University of the District of Columbia. He is the author of two books: a volume of poetry, A Boy's Dream (Pessoa Press, 2011) and a nonfiction book, Masculinity in Children's Animal Stories, 1888-1928: A Critical Study of Anthropomorphic Tales by Wilde, Kipling, Potter, Grahame, and Milne (McFraland Press, 2011). He lives in Mt. Rainer, MD."


"Bernard Demczuk, Ph.D. is a 40-year+ DC resident living in the Shaw community where he has been active in community, corporate, academic, labor and government relations. He is currently the Assistant VP for DC government relations at the George Washington University where he has represented the university for 18 years. He is the university’s chief government liaison on all things DC.

Bernard holds a doctorate in American Studies and African American history and culture from GWU (BS, U. of Md.; MS, AU). He lectures widely on Black history and culture, labor history and governmental policy. In 2013, the Washington Urban League honored him with the Whitey M. Young Award at its 75th Annual Awards Gala.

Bernard started his career as the Recreational Director at St. Elizabeths Hospital in Anacostia in 1971. After four years as a Corrections Officer at the DC Jail, where he also taught Black Studies to the inmates, he was promoted to National Political Director for the American Federation of Government Employees Union in 1981 where he directed the union’s labor relations with the city until 1989. While at AFGE, he sat on the Metropolitan Labor Council, AFL-CIO’s Board of Directors for eight years. In 1989, the local DC AFL-CIO selected him as the “Outstanding Trade Unionist of the Year.”  Bernard has traveled abroad widely teaching and lecturing in international relations, civil and human rights in Russia, Europe, Africa, the Caribbean, Palestine, Israel, South and Central America and throughout the USA.

In 1989, Bernard joined Jesse Jackson’s National Rainbow Coalition as its Labor Director. Before joining the Rainbow, he led Jesse Jackson’s 1984 and 1988 labor strategy in those two Presidential campaigns.

From 1992-1998, Mayor Sharon Pratt Kelly and Mayor Marion Barry selected Bernard as the Director of Intergovernmental Relations for the Executive Office of the Mayor (today’s Office of Policy and Legislative Affairs) where he was the chief lobbyist for the Mayor to the City Council, US Congress and White House.

Bernard retired from city government in 1998. Now at GW, he sits on the board of directors of the DC Chamber of Commerce, the Legislative Affairs Committee of the Board of Trade, the Ben’s Chili Bowl Foundation and numerous other boards. He is Ben’s Chili Bowl’s historian and the resident historian of the Howard Theatre.

Bernard has taught African American history and culture at the DCPS School Without Walls for 13 years and is the faculty advisor of the GW Williams House (The Black House) at GW. He lectures frequently on DC Black history and culture in the DCgovernment and for community and corporate groups. He is the Black Broadway on U film project’s historian directed by Shellee Haynesworth."