SEARCHING FOR 'PRECIOUS STONES': AN EXPLORATION OF BALTIMORE'S ARTS, CULTURE & HEALTH EFFORTS FROM 1968-2023
PLEASE JOIN THE BCHS FOR OUR 2024 BALTIMORE HISTORY EVENING SERIES AS WE WELCOME DAVID FAKUNLE ON THURSDAY, MAY 16TH AT 7:00 PM ON ZOOM.
Register here: https://zoom.us/.../tJctd-itqj4rE9TZnB6ML5x-cNO395oCv3fK...
The evening's talk will explore the scope and impact of intentional arts, culture and health efforts in Baltimore City between 1968 and the present.
David Olawuyi Fakunle, Ph.D. is a “mercenary for change,” employing the necessary skills and occupying the necessary spaces to help strengthen everyone divested from their truest self, particularly those who identify as Black, Indigenous and/or a Person of Color. David serves as Assistant Professor of Public and Allied Health at the Morgan State University School of Community Health & Policy, Adjunct Assistant Professor at the University of Florida Center for Arts in Medicine, and Associate Faculty in Mental Health at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. David’s interests include stressors within the built environment, manifestations of systemic oppression, and the utilization of arts and culture to cultivate holistic health through humanity, justice, equity and ultimately, liberation.
Additionally, David has applied artistic and cultural practices such as Black storytelling, African drumming, singing and theater in the proclamation of truth for over 25 years, collaborating primarily with organizations in the Baltimore/Washington, D.C. region. Among many affiliations, David is co-founder and CEO of DiscoverME/RecoverME, an organization that utilizes the African oral tradition to empower use of storytelling for healing and growth, serves as Executive Director of WombWork Productions, a Baltimore-based social change performing arts company, and serves as Chair of the Maryland Lynching Truth and Reconciliation Commission, the first state-level commission in the U.S. dedicated to chronicling and bringing justice to racial terror lynchings.