A Young Black Man Going Ego Trippin’

Our visionary Tonya Cross is the organizer of local community conversation “Peace Circle” that launched in July 2015.  The Peace Circle creates a safe space for open and honest dialogue about social issues that impact the local community. The conversations are held the first Tuesday of every month at Mean Mug Coffee Company, 1024 S. Fulton Street, Salisbury NC.

Peace Circle hosted their first parent/child workshop sessions “What’s Your Role In The Village?” in September 2015 which addressed how systemic racism, discrimination, and stereotypes impacts the local community. A Young Black Man Going Ego Trippin’ photo series was inspiration for artwork and poetry created by local youth who attended the workshops. Mrs. Carla Marlin Smith a parent engagement specialist at Parent University of Chapel Hill – Carrboro City Schools was the workshop facilitator. Ms. Anneca Raines of Uhkneeka Rainz Photography is the photographer of the photo series.

Young Black Man Going Ego Trippin'

Young Black Man Going Ego Trippin’ Photo Source: Carla Smith

A Young Black Man Going Ego Trippin’ is currently being featured at Waterworks Visual Arts Center, 123 E. Liberty Street, Salisbury NC. The photo exhibit includes art and poems created by the local youth who attended Peace Circle’s workshop! The young men in the photo series also have Salisbury NC/Rowan County ties. The exhibit will be up till September and we would like to encourage everyone in Salisbury, NC and surrounding areas to visit the exhibit. Thanks for your continued support!

The Vine Events

JOIN | SHARE | LEARN

Follow us on Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram!

 

Hello March – Community Film Screenings

Hello March! We’re co-hosting two film screenings this month. We believe it’s imperative to keep our local community informed about social issues that impact them. Both screenings are FREE and will take place in Salisbury NC. Click event photo for Facebook Event Page to RSVP!

13TH – Friday, March 17th at 7pm at Park Avenue Community, 632 Park Ave, Salisbury, NC 28144.

13TH - Director, Ava DuVernay

13TH – Director, Ava DuVernay

Class Divide – Friday, March 24th at 6:30pm at Mission House, 120 Statesville Blvd, Salisbury, NC 28144.

EPIX Series - America Divided: Class Divided

EPIX Series – America Divided: Class Divide 

JOIN | SHARE | LEARN
The Vine Events

My Sister’s Keeper

We’re celebrating Black History Month! Join us for “My Sister’s Keeper” on Saturday, February 25th at 4pm at Westridge Place Apartments Clubhouse, 100 Donner Dr, Salisbury NC. We will have a panel discussion about financial literacy, group economics, and community development. Also there will be local female business owners vending their products at the event so, bring your dollars to circulate!  Photo Source: Createher Stock

The Vine Events
facebook.com/TheVineEventPlanning
instagram.com/TheVineEvents
twitter.com/TheVineEvents

Women’s History Month

The month of March is Women’s History Month. The Vine Events is commemorating the accomplishments of women around the globe. Visit our social media pages for daily post honoring women. 

International Women’s Day is also celebrated in March. Our very own, Tonya Cross, was featured in Donnatela Blog for International Women’s Day! To read blog in English, log on to your laptop and select English in translator drop box. Thanks Lidia Evangelista for inclusion among a list of GREAT women!

 

Photo Source: Accented Glory Website Pictured: Tonya Cross, Founder of The Vine Events and Accented Glory. 

 JOIN | SHARE | LEARN The Vine Event Planning Facebook – TheVineEventPlanning Twitter – TheVineEvents Google+ – The Vine Event Planning 

Our specialty is informative events such as, Q&A parties, screening dialogues, interpersonal workshops, and community forums. We offer both face-to-face and online event designs. Contact us today for a “free” consultation for your next meeting/event.

Dunbar Center Commemorative Event

IMG_4373

Join Renaissance Arts Program (RAP) as we commemorate the Dunbar Center. RAP is a grassroots collective initiative recently started by local artists and community organizers. Our goal is to expose local African American youth to their culture and heritage through the arts.

We felt that it was important that someone respond to the burning of Dunbar Center. We have accepted this task and have planned an event for Black History Month. The event is Saturday February 21st from 12noon-3pm at Southern City Tabernacle AME Zion Church, 940 South Long Street, East Spencer, NC. The purpose of this event is two fold. 1) Commemorate historical significance of Dunbar Center 2) Introduce RAP’s vision to community.

Vendors interested in being a part of this event should contact Tonya Cross at cross.tonya@gmail.com. **There is NO VENDING FEE; we ask that vendors donate 10% of sales to arts program.**

Never Forget: You Can’t Burn Down History

JOIN | SHARE | LEARN

The Vine Event Planning Facebook – TheVineEventPlanning
Twitter – TheVineEvents
Google+ – The Vine Event Planning

Our specialty is informative events such as, Q&A parties, screening dialogues, interpersonal workshops, and community forums. We offer both face-to-face and online event designs. Contact us today for a “free” consultation for your next meeting/event.

Upcoming Event – Negros With Guns Screening Dialogue

IMG_4353

We’re highlighting North Carolina African American History for Black History Month! Join us for screening of Negros With Guns: Rob Williams and Black Power on Sunday, February 22nd at 4pm at Westridge Place Apartments Clubhouse, 100 Donner Drive, Salisbury NC. A discussion will follow the screening. (Clubhouse is located directly behind former Salisbury Mall)

“Credited with inspiring the Black Power Movement, Robert Williams led his North Carolina hometown to defend itself against the Ku Klux Klan and challenge repressive Jim Crow laws. NEGROES WITH GUNS: Rob Williams and Black Power follows Williams’s journey from southern community leader to exile in Cuba and China, a journey that brought the issue of armed self-defense to the forefront of the Civil Rights Movement.” – PBS.org

JOIN | SHARE | LEARN

The Vine Event Planning Facebook – TheVineEventPlanning
Twitter – TheVineEvents
Google+ – The Vine Event Planning

Our specialty is informative events such as, Q&A parties, screening dialogues, interpersonal workshops, and community forums. We offer both face-to-face and online event designs. Contact us today for a “free” consultation for your next meeting/event.

March: Women’s History Month

Women's History Month 2014This month, The Vine Events is commemorating Women’s History Month. National Women’s History Project (NWHP) theme for 2014 is “Celebrating Women of Character, Courage, and Commitment”. Visit our social network pages for daily post about great women and their accomplishments. For more information about Women’s History Month and NWHP click here.

During March, we’re also hosting an online dialogue about African presence in the Bible. We’ll be discussing chapter 2 of Bishop J.W. Hood book “The Centennial of African Methodism” (click here to read). Bishop Hood was one of the founders of Livingstone College and Hood Theological Seminary was named after him. Both institutions are located in Salisbury, NC. Our dialogue will be on Tuesday, March 25th at 9pm EST. Visit Upcoming Events to RSVP.

JOIN | SHARE | LEARN

The Vine Event Planning
Facebook – TheVineEventPlanning
Twitter – TheVineEvents
Google+ – The Vine Event Planning

Our specialty is informative events such as, Q&A parties, screening dialogues, interpersonal workshops, and community forums. We offer both face-to-face and online event designs. Contact us today for a “free” consultation for your next meeting/event.

African American History Begins In Africa

Continent of AfricaWe are excited about February! We will be hosting a screening dialogue of the film “Prince Among Slaves” in honor of Black History Month. This documentary reveals the fact that African American History does not begin with slavery; African American History begins in Africa. The film is based on a true story about a Prince from West Africa named Abdul Rahman Sori, who was captured and sold to English slavers.

Our awareness campaign this month on our social media sites will highlight African History. We will dispel the myth that African slaves were uneducated and uncultured people. The United States was built and sustain by a people who possessed skills and knowledge that they acquired in Africa, not through slave owners.  Our campaign will affirm that African History is the foundation of African American History.

We invite you to join us on this journey as we learn about the African roots and legacy of a great people who forever changed America.

JOIN | SHARE | LEARN

The Vine Event Planning
Facebook – TheVineEventPlanning
Twitter – TheVineEvents
Google+ – The Vine Events Chat Cafe

Our specialty is informative events such as, Q&A parties, screening dialogues, interpersonal workshops, and community forums. We offer both face-to-face and online event designs. Contact us today for a “free” consultation for your next meeting/event.

November: Native American Heritage Month

It’s that time of year again, when we spend time with our family and give thanks for our many blessings. This November, we encourage you to go beyond the school textbook version of Thanksgiving and research accounts from Native People themselves. Their accounts of the first Thanksgiving are very different and expose truths we all should be aware of.

Here is a link to “The Suppressed Speech of Wamsutta James” which was delivered at the first National Day of Mourning in Plymouth, MA. Wamsutta James, an Aquinnah Wampanoag elder and Native American activist, was originally asked to speak at the Commonwealth of Massachusetts Thanksgiving Reenactment in 1970. The event organizers disapproved of his speech which gave birth to the National Day of Mourning; a protest to the continued misrepresentation of Native People and American colonization.

This month, become more knowledgeable of American Indians and Alaska Natives contributions and accomplishments. November is Native American Heritage Month and according to a Tuscarora Proverb, “they are not dead who live in the hearts they leave behind.” Some Native Americans work year round for the American Indian Movement (AIM) which strives to encourage cultural preservation and maintain recognition of treaty rights-http://www.aimovement.org/.  For more information about Alaska Native Heritage visit http://www.alaskanative.net/  and American Indian Heritage visit http://nativeamericanheritagemonth.gov/index.html.

This Thanksgiving, say thanks not only for your blessings but, for the contributions of American Indians and Alaska Natives celebrated during November.

JOIN | SHARE | LEARN

The Vine Event Planning
Facebook – TheVineEventPlanning
Twitter – TheVineEvents
Google+ – The Vine Events Chat Cafe