African-American Authors
Meet with other local booklovers to discuss literature by African-American authors.
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African-American Authors Events Today
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AFCON 2026 Semi-Finals Watch Party - Live Double-Header Screening
## **Free w/RSVP Now: [RSVP Now](https://AFCONWatchParty.eventbrite.com/?aff=MU)**
## **⚽🔥 AFCON 2026 Semi-Finals Watch Party**
### **Live Double-Header Screening**
Join us for an unforgettable **AFCON 2026 Semi-Finals Watch Party**, featuring a **live double-header** showcasing the final four powerhouses of African football.
Experience two fiercely competitive clashes from the **Africa Cup of Nations 2026** as **Nigeria, Morocco, Senegal, and Egypt** battle for a place in the final.
This back-to-back, high-stakes screening runs from **11:00 AM to 5:00 PM EST** at **The Continent DC**—DC’s premier African fine dining restaurant and lounge. Expect a spacious setting, multiple large screens, elevated sound, and a vibrant atmosphere designed for collective celebration.
## 🏟️ Match Schedule (EST)
### 🕛 Game 1 — 12:00 PM
**Senegal 🇸🇳 vs Egypt 🇪🇬**
A heavyweight clash between champions and legacy builders.
*We recommend arriving between **11:00 AM and 11:30 AM** to get settled before kickoff.*
### 🕒 Game 2 — 3:00 PM
**Nigeria 🇳🇬 vs Morocco 🇲🇦**
Speed, skill, and intensity collide as two giants fight for a spot in the final.
*If you’re joining us for the second match only, we recommend arriving between **2:00 PM and 2:30 PM** to catch the full experience.*
Whether you come for one match or stay for both, this is African football at its highest level—shared, celebrated, and felt together.
## 🌍 The Full Experience
This is more than a screening. It’s a cultural moment.
Enjoy delicious African cuisine, African-inspired cocktails, and curated African music—all within a space built for community, connection, and celebration. Come early, wear your team colors, bring your people, and be part of an experience that goes beyond the pitch.
**This is more than a watch party.**
It’s pride. It’s unity. It’s Africa on display.
Winter 2026 Black Business Accelerator Program
FIRST STEP: Complete this Application Link:
[https://www.chamberorganizer.com/members/form.php?orgcode=CVAC&fid=4888901](https://www.chamberorganizer.com/members/form.php?orgcode=CVAC&fid=4888901)
Who Is The Program Designed For?
Businesses that:
-Hold a business license from a city or county located in the Richmond Richmond Metropolitan Statistical Area (MSA)
-Been in business at least 2 years
-Desire to increase the number of employees
-Has a vision to grow the business
The Black Business Accelerator Program’s goal is to help propel African American businesses to a level in which they can compete and perform equally with majority businesses that have stronger roots and relationships. We support this goal with a 3 month course that covers 6 sessions with industry leaders in the areas of accessing capital, organizational development, human resources, branding, and growing digitally.
The Black Business Accelerator Program receives sponsorship from Henrico Economic Development, Chesterfield Economic Development, and the Virginia State University Center for Entrepreneurship, enabling us to offer a low tuition fee of $300 for the full course. Participants in the program have the choice to pay the tuition in full or opt for a two-payment plan, with the full payment due before the course's first day.
The program offers both virtual and in-person options. In-person classes are conducted at 6802 Paragon Place, 2nd Floor Conference Room, Richmond, VA. Virtual students will receive information during the course to join. The course consists of six sessions held on Wednesday evenings from 7:00 PM to 8:30 PM on the following dates. Applicants should ensure their availability for these dates before applying:
**WINTER 2026 DATES**
* January 14
* January 28
* February 11
* February 28
* March 11
* March 25
All Boys Aren't Blue
For January's selection, we'll be reading All Boys Aren't Blue by George M. Johnson.
Find out more information and register here: https://arlingtonva.libcal.com/event/15663421
Casual Warmachine/Hordes
Come play and learn with the best Warmachine and Hordes players in the world!
Round Table: Navigating this current job market
We've noticed an uptick in the community seeking advice on navigating the current job market (no shocker here) and wanted to create an in person space for folks to dive in.
Whether you have questions or believe you have knowledge that would be helpful to the collective, we'd love for you to join this event.
To help make moderation easier, **post your questions here**: https://forms.gle/Nw3UKrtPj5U4Ln53A
**Event schedule:**
* 6 - 6:30PM: Socialize, get food
* 6:30: Boomie will give a short talk on her job search advice and then open it up for discussion and Q&A
* 7:45: Begin to wrap up to allow us to be out of the space promptly by 8PM
African-American Authors Events This Week
Discover what is happening in the next few days
American Mahjong Casual Play
Open play for American Mahjong. We welcome players of all levels although we do not offer lessons. Players should have their own official 2025 American Mahjong League Card. We play in room 109 at the Greenbelt Community Center.
Book Talk & Signing Resonate Healing Voices
On Sunday, January 18th, Resonate Healing Spaces will host a FREE warm and intimate Book Signing and Talk at PJ’s Coffee. Join **Dr. Michelle Hammond, Editor and Co-Author, and Sherry Steine, Co-Author**, for a heartfelt conversation about healing, restorative community spaces, and the power of feeling supported through life’s transitions.
Resonate Healing Voices is a powerful anthology that brings together personal stories, professional expertise and diverse healing practices to restore balance and harmony in mind, body, and soul. From holistic wellness an ancestrial wisdom to modern therapuetic approaches, each chapter resonates with tools and inspiration for resilience, transformation, and inner peace.
More than a book, Resonate Healing Voices is a guide and companion for anyone ready to step into wholeness, embrace wellness, and hear the call of healing that unites us all.
Two of the nine authors will share reflections from *Resonate Healing Spaces*, answer questions, and offer gentle insights on creating environments that nourish emotional well-being. Guests will have the opportunity to connect in a relaxed café setting, enjoy meaningful dialogue, and deepen their understanding of healing practices.
**Copies of the book will be available for sale and signing on-site**, making this a wonderful chance to take home a personal, signed edition.
**[FREE EVENT RSVP HERE](https://www.sbwaligned.com/event-details/resonate-healing-voices-book-signing-event)**
A Poetic Tribute to Dr. Martin Luther King - This Is a No-Host Event
**Tickets Free; Registration required**
Each year, the Folger celebrates Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday with a free and family-friendly event featuring contemporary poets reading historic speeches from Dr. King and others. For this year’s celebration, the O.B. Hardison Poetry Series is excited to partner with Mosaic Theater Company to celebrate the life, legacy, and mission of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. with an exclusive performance of a scene from Mosaic’s highly-anticipated theater production, Young John Lewis: Prodigy of Protest.
https://www.folger.edu/whats-on/not-just-another-day-off-2026/
Pre-Modern African Philosophy; Zera Yacob and Walda Heywat
**\*\*Please note we are starting 15 minutes early because of a conflict with the room at 2:45 pm.\*\***
Embarking on an exploration of African philosophy before the modern era immediately raises surprising questions of scope, method, and interpretation.
We might think we know what we mean by the term “Africa,” but if we are referring to the continent, then we have to ask questions such as: should we start our investigation with Saint Augustine? He was, after all, ethnically an African Berber. Yet it seems obvious that he fits more comfortably into the European philosophical tradition. What about the thought of ancient Egypt, wherefrom we can trace an influence on the Greeks, especially regarding mathematics? Moreover, both Christianity and Islam extended their reach into Africa. When we encounter their influence, should we treat them as alien interventions, or as ways of thinking that integrated into African cultures?
Methodological problems emerge because much of the wisdom traditions of Africa were never recorded in writing but were passed down orally across generations. Can any of the ideas of those traditions be recovered? If so, is there any way of understanding them on their own terms, or do they inevitably become polluted by the modern, and often colonial, interpretations through which they are viewed? Indeed, examining African philosophy raises definitional questions: should we consider philosophy to be something done by the elite scholars and sages of a society, or should it refer to the wider worldview of the culture itself, as its people grapple with questions of being, knowledge, and the best ways to live together?
Furthermore, if we don’t think of Africa as a mere landmass, but in terms of culture, then we must ask: is there a singular African culture? While scholars sometimes sought for a monolithically “African” philosophy in the past, it seems clear that there are a diversity of cultural and philosophical traditions that must be accounted for.
For our purposes, we will leave aside Augustine (whom we previously addressed in detail as part of the Greco-Roman canon) and examine three areas of African philosophy for which contemporary scholars have found enough material to extensively analyze.
First, due to the existence of a written record, the thought of ancient Egypt and its sages are available to us to some degree. We will read some secondary scholarship that can give us at least a fragmentary look into a world far removed from ours that seems very different, yet at the same time familiar.
Next, the Ethiopian thinker Zera Yacob and his protege Walda Heywat wrote their “Hatatas,” or inquiries, in the 1500s, and demonstrated that serious philosophical thinking was occurring in Africa under an education system that was quite different from the European one. At the same time their thought was influenced by Christianity and its disputes with indigenous traditions, Islam, and Judaism. Yacob recorded the interesting story of his life and in the process asked deep questions about his relationship to his deity and the world, as well as the best way to live. His student Heywat then followed in his footsteps, providing his own philosophical take on perennial questions.
Finally, we will read additional secondary literature on a variety of African philosophical topics, including sage philosophy, oral philosophy, what it means to be a person, and the concept of Ubuntu.
This month we will read *[The Hatata Inquiries](https://www.amazon.com/Hatata-Inquiries-Seventeenth-Century-Philosophy-Responsibilities/dp/3112214110)*, by Zera Yacob and Walda Heywat, which is available in paperback on Amazon. Please read pages 1-8 and 71-160. The front matter (maps and figures, chronology, histories of the manuscripts) is also of interest.
Additionally, please read the following chapters in *[Africana Philosophy from Ancient Egypt to the Nineteenth Centur](https://www.amazon.com/Africana-Philosophy-Ancient-Nineteenth-Century-ebook/dp/B0F1LLX3WB)y*: 2, 4, 5, 6, 12, 15, 16, 17, and 20. Each chapter is short, and they total about 90 pages of reading. Chapters 8, 9, 10, and 18 are also informative, but optional. This text is available in print and for Kindle on Amazon.
Since we are dealing with pre-modern African philosophy in this session, we will delay exploring philosophy among the African diaspora or modern African thinkers until later meetings.
**Secondary Resources**
*Wikipedia:*
[Zera Yacob](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zera_Yacob_%28philosopher%29)
[Walda Heywat](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Walda_Heywat)
[African Philosophy](http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/African_philosophy)
*Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy:*
[Africana Philosophy (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)](https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/africana/)
[African Sage Philosophy (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)](https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/african-sage/)
[Akan Philosophy of the Person (Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy)](https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/akan-person/)
A Poetry Workshop
Hey Poetry Lovers!
This group is on a roll. Here’s the gist:
We meet at the **Capital One Café in Chinatown** from **12pm - 2pm** every other week.
For enrichment, we start by reading and reflecting on a **“published poem”**, suggested by someone in the group. No advance preparation is necessary. But feel free to check out some of the poems we’ve read [here](https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/e/2PACX-1vSyE_wCLQCPHRrKmN5F9tOIeeRQUZESxjRXGVBoCF2uU8Gm0_d0uECiCBCQXEy6ksxfsBOhtRIOpW3T/pubhtml?gid=0&single=true&widget=true&headers=false%22%3E%3C/iframe%3E). Or submit suggestions for future meetings [here](https://docs.google.com/forms/d/e/1FAIpQLSexGc2Z2Kp6bZW0D3_hfJ7NUUkfNHf7TXX-43FglCeBd9EF2Q/viewform?usp=send_form).
Next, we **share our work and offer feedback**. Depending on attendance, everyone gets \~10 minutes to use as they like. (No need to share, though; you’re welcome to come even if you prefer just to listen.)
We maintain a **Discord server** to help share our work and communicate outside our bi-weekly meet-ups. If you haven’t used Discord before, take a moment to download it and create an account before arriving. When we meet you on Saturday, we will add you to our server, the “DC Poetry Workshop”, and can help you navigate the app if you have questions.
Finally, if you plan on sharing a poem, consider how you will do so. Some options include:
* Print 5-10 copies to distribute in person
* Take and share screenshots in the Discord chat.
* Copy the poem into a google doc, change sharing settings to “anyone with link”, and copy the google doc link into the Discord chat.
Most importantly, we’re excited to meet you!
Catch you on Saturday,
Diego / Ian / Cayden / Nate / Otasha / Lia / An
Defending Self-Determination From DC to Venezuela
*An Assata Shakur Study Group on US Military Escalation: From the Invasion of Venezuela to National Guard in DC.*
The U.S. is escalating its war on the Global South—from attacks on Venezuela to the use of military force, ICE deportations and juvenile curfews, including the National Guard deployment in DC.
Join **Pan African Community Action (PACA)** to unpack how the U.S. empire and its allies justify invasion and terror through media narratives, sanctions, and so called “international law”, while denying people’s right to self-determination. We will examine ongoing resistance in Venezuela and why these struggles matter for working-class and oppressed communities everywhere. The discussion will also connect foreign militarism to domestic repression and the need to build real community power in Southeast D.C.
*Food will be provided!*
Please register as well:
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Shut Up & Write!® Hyattsville/Wed. Writing
Join us for an hour of writing! We’ve discovered that it’s strikingly helpful to write with other writers. See if it’s true for you at **7:00 PM on Wednesday evenings.**
Edit: As of January 7, 2026, we will be back at Starbucks!
Be it a book, blog, script, essay, dissertation, resume, melody, poem or just plain work stuff, you are invited to write it with us. No one will see what you've written or give you unsolicited advice. Instead of just thinking about writing, come and get some real writing done.
**We'll meet inside the coffee shop**. Please buy something to ensure we're welcome back. Sit down anywhere, but let me know you're here so we can introduce ourselves and check in before and after writing! (I'll be the one with the sign.)
**SCHEDULE:**
7:00 - Quick introductions
7:20 - Timer starts: write for 1 hour
8:20 - The End: chat, take off, or keep writing
Writing is very solitary. Connecting (and sometimes even commiserating) with other writers is a cool thing.
BEING LATE IS OKAY: just show up and get settled, then check-in with me after the session. If you were on time, please be willing to make room for the friendly latecomer.
Happy writing and I look forward to seeing you!
**What Should I Bring?**
Whatever you need to be able to write! Note that outlets are limited, so please make sure your devices are charged.
Bring earbuds/earplugs if you want to block the overhead music or the conversation by other patrons.
**Other Important Details:**
Starbucks has WiFi.
TRAVEL / PARKING: The shopping area is about a twenty minute walk from the College Park or P. G. Plaza/Hyattsville Crossing Metro Stations. There's also a bus stop right outside the shopping center on Baltimore Ave. Parking is free.
SEATING INFORMATION: Seating is first come first serve. I'll try to grab a table, but be prepared to sit down anywhere.
FOOD GUIDELINES: Tea, coffee, and light food are available at the coffee shop. Please thank our hosts by purchasing something to drink.
African-American Authors Events Near You
Connect with your local African-American Authors community
Spades at the South Riding Inn
Hi all,
So excited to get this new group started!
I wanted to reach out to start planning our first meet-up. What does everyone think about meeting this Friday (1/16) from 6:30–8:30pm at the South Riding Inn (43090 Peacock Market Plaza)?
Quick headcount question so we can plan seating: are you planning to come solo, or bring your spouse/partner?
Feel free to reply here or comment in the event. Looking forward to meeting everyone!
Shut Up & Write! at Ridgetop Coffee and Tea
**Looking for a group you can write with *whilst sipping your fave coffee*?** ☕✍️
Then come join **Shut Up & Write!** on **Saturday, January 24th from 1:30pm to 4:00pm** at **Ridgetop Coffee & Tea**!
Whether you're cranking out a novel, journaling, looking for new friends, or just trying to get that stubborn paragraph right—we’ve got a cozy seat and a supportive group waiting for you! **No critiques, no peer review, no pressure—just a chill space to get words on the page.**
📝 **What to expect:**
1:30–2:00pm – Grab your coffee or tea, find your seat, and meet your fellow writers.
2:00pm–3:30pm – Silent, focused writing time
3:30–4:00pm – Debrief, celebrate any writing wins, commiserate on any obstacles, and head out feeling accomplished.
**RSVP Info:** The room seats only 8 people comfortably! RSVP as soon as possible to secure your spot!! If you are unable to attend, please cancel your reservation **ASAP** so those on the wait list are able to RSVP and attend!!!
**Meeting Room:** Enter the coffee shop, walk straight towards the play area and on your left you will see a meeting room just past the bathrooms. The room has a TV, white board, and walls are painted green.
**What to Bring:** Whatever helps you focus, and be productive. There is a wall outlet at each end of the room, so you're able to bring your laptop to write. You're welcome to bring headphones if you enjoy listening to music while working.
**Parking & Accessibility:** there is a large parking lot out front and it is free! There are no stair cases when entering the coffee shop or when inside. This coffee shop is incredibly spacious with many seating options. If you have any questions, please message me through MeetUp. I'm happy to help.
**Dietary Information:** many GF, Vegan, and SF options. Just ask your barista when ordering for specifics!
Can’t wait to see you there! 🎉
Shut Up & Write! at Cascades Library
Looking for a quiet, focused space to write?
Come be part of our writing group—a dedicated time just for writing alongside fellow writers in your community. No readings, no critiques, no peer-review—just you writing within a supportive atmosphere.
7pm-7:15pm: Find your seat, set up your writing station, quick intro's.
7:15pm-8:45 pm: An hour and a half of silent focused writing.
8:45pm-9pm: Quick debrief, pack and head home.
Can't wait to see you! :)
Profs & Pints DC: How Africans Fought Slavery
[Profs and Pints DC](https://www.profsandpints.com/washingtondc) presents: **“How Africans Fought Slavery,”** on the hidden history of resistance to the Transatlantic Slave Trade among those targeted by it, with Richard Bell, professor of history at the University of Maryland, College Park.
[Advance tickets: $13.50 plus sales tax and processing fees. Available at [https://www.ticketleap.events/tickets/profsandpints/africans-fought-slavery](https://www.ticketleap.events/tickets/profsandpints/africans-fought-slavery) .]
The Transatlantic Slave Trade was the largest forced migration in human history. In all, more than 12 million African men, women, and children were kidnapped and made to board European ships destined for the New World.
Generally left out of our history books is the fact that African people fought the Transatlantic Slave Trade from the moment raiders approached their villages throughout every stage of the deadly Middle Passage.
Join Profs and Pints fan favorite Richard Bell for a talk that turns the slave trade’s history inside out by examining the huge varieties of African resistance to this 400-year-long nightmare.
He’ll discuss how African people fought capture through fortified villages, armed flight, and deception awareness. Their struggle to stay free involved rebellions inside African coastal forts, hundreds of shipboard mutinies, hunger strikes, and mass drownings.
You’ll learn how African suicides and revolts, as well as the constant threat of captive rebellion, forced European traders to spend enormous sums on weaponry, guards, surveillance, and ship redesign. Such costs, historians now calculate, saved more than a million Africans from ever being trafficked across the Atlantic.
Far from being helpless victims of an unstoppable system, African captives proved relentlessly defiant, leaving a record that reshapes our understanding of the trade and the roots of African American resistance. (Door: $17, or $15 with a student ID. Listed time is for doors. The talk starts 30 minutes later.)
Image: The slave ship La Amistad, site of a famous mutiny by the slaves on board. (Artist unknown / Wikimedia Commons.)
BreadBreakers One-Meeting Book Club: Of Mice and Men
**BreadBreakers is a community where people of all different belief systems and backgrounds can create community - and what better way to do that than reading together?**
Join us as we combine the kind, curious, and welcoming atmosphere of a BreadBreakers dinner with the thought-provoking, fun format of a book club. Here's what to expect:
* We'll be reading *Of Mice and Men*, by John Steinbeck.
* This will be a one-meeting club, so if you've ever wanted to do a book club but couldn't commit to multiple meetings, here's your opportunity!
* Snacks :)
* BreadBreakers ground rules apply - we'll lead with curiosity, converse with kindness, and strive to dig beneath the surface level.
* We'll be gathering in Meeting Room 1 at the Reston Regional Library.
* Participants will be responsible for obtaining their own copies of the book. [Here's the Amazon link, if helpful.](https://www.amazon.com/Mice-Men-John-Steinbeck/dp/0140177396)
* Our BreadBreakers table hosts will come ready with questions and facilitation skills - you come ready to discuss!
**I've never attended a BreadBreakers event before - what is BreadBreakers?**
BreadBreakers is a community where neighbors from all different beliefs and backgrounds can **hear, be heard, and know one another.** Most frequently, we do this through the ancient practice of breaking bread around a common dining table.
But we're more than just a discussion group - we're a movement to heal our world's broken discourse and forge togetherness in a time of isolation and loneliness. **Through the sacred act of just "being" together, we're working to rebuild the town square, one table (or book club) at a time.**
BreadBreakers is a religiously inclusive by Restoration United Methodist Church in Reston, VA. All faiths, beliefs, and stripes are welcomed, and our leadership and community include people who attend Restoration and people who don't.
👩🏿🎨♠️👨🏽🎨 NEW! 3rd Friday Spades in VA@ Nando's Peri Peri Chicken
♠️ Spades in Virginia! ♠️
Nando's Peri Peri, Mosaic District
2987 District Ave Ste 100,
Fairfax, VA 22031
🌟 3rd Fridays
🕕 6:30pm to 10:30pm
Spades in Virginia! We are trying a new location. If things go well, we may meet there more often.
🚗 Parking is FREE!!!
Alcoholic beverages are available!Please support the business by ordering food/drinks.
No partner is needed! Find one when you get there. All skill levels are welcome.
Come hang out with us and have a great time!
📆 Posted in multiple groups. So expect a nice crowd.
🌟 The fun starts at 6:30pm! RSVP today.
Shut Up & Write! at Sterling Library
Looking for a quiet, focused space to write?
Come be part of our writing group—a dedicated time just for writing alongside fellow writers in your community. No readings, no critiques, no peer-review—just you writing within a supportive atmosphere.
11:00am-11:15am: Find your seat, set up your writing station, quick intro's.
11:15pm-12:45 pm: An hour and a half of silent focused writing.
12:45pm-1:00pm: Quick debrief, pack and head home.
Can't wait to see you! :)























