Author: Editor

Milwaukee mother gets help building her first home in Walnut Hill

On September 11, as the nation mourned the 16th anniversary of the 9/11 loss and destruction, a Milwaukee woman and her family were full of hope as they built their future. A large group of volunteers from Komatsu joined Lavitta Moore and Milwaukee Habitat for Humanity to raise the walls of her very first home. As a mother of three, Moore has had to move her children through multiple rentals because of increasing rent and safety concerns. Moore’s future home in District 15 is on the 2100 block of North 31st, and with every nail she pounded into planks...

Read More

Robert J. Miller: Lessons from a time when both sides prayed to the same God

Even before he attended seminary studies in southeastern Wisconsin on his journey to priesthood, Reverend Robert J. Miller held a fascination and interest in the history of the American Civil War. Spanning a lifelong ministry that started in Chicago’s African-American south-side community, including the historic Bronzeville neighborhood, Reverend Miller has authored six books related to history and religious faith. This unique perspective has made him a leading authority of probably the least explored issue that also happens to be one of the most important aspects of America’s worst conflict. In 1861, the world’s most devout, Bible-reading country went to...

Read More

Tattoo convention draws inked bodies as living art

“But what is shape? Only a cup for the blazing soul that God provides us all.” ― Ray Bradbury, The Illustrated Man Philadelphia-based tattoo convention organizers, Villain Arts, returned to America’s Dairyland for the 8th year to host their traveling tattoo arts event over the September 15 weekend. The Milwaukee Tattoo Arts Convention hosted hundreds of the finest professional tattooers, tattoo memorabilia, and a curiosity-themed carnival of sideshow performers. The sprawling exhibition has produced annual appearances nationwide for more than two decades. This year Villain Arts added four major cities to its annual convention circuit, including Houston, Denver, and...

Read More

Beloved Pete Tsitiridis brings food, family, and the future to MLK Drive

“You can’t just love Pete, you have to understand why you love Pete. He took a young man, living in low income, with a single parent mother, and it was not always the best the neighborhood. But that’s not what he saw. He saw a young man who was working hard, who wanted something out of life. Pete took him under his wings, and brought him into his family. Today, this young man was able go to college because of Pete’s Fruit Market. This young man was able to represent his community because of Pete’s Fruit Market. This young...

Read More

Stacey Williams-Ng: Big fish and lots of joy

“One thing I love about mural art is being out in the open and getting to meet passers by. I had one woman come by and introduce herself, and say ‘thank you’ for investing in my community, and gave me a big hug. And that really meant a lot to me. We had two children from the children’s center come out and look at the mural, and one of them kept exclaiming ‘big fish.’ Later I found out that the child is legally blind, and that the fish are so big she was able to actually see them, which...

Read More

John Ridley’s comic book sequel continues journey of black hero in alternate timeline

Oscar-winning writer John Ridley returned to comic books with “The American Way: Those Above and Those Below,” uniting with his series artist Georges Jeanty. The six-issue monthly miniseries hit the shelves over the summer, published under DC Entertainment’s Vertigo imprint. Staying true to The American Way, this sequel will explore historically significant sociopolitical and racial themes still relevant today. The story picks up in 1972, the year of Richard Nixon, Angela Davis, Watergate and the Weather Underground, when social and political tensions in America were at an all-time high. “On the 10-year anniversary of the series, it feels both...

Read More