The Seattle Black Spatial Histories Institute is Wa Na Wari’s community story training program. Over the course of two years, a community cohort works with a faculty of Black oral historians from around the country, as well as with local historians, archivists, geographers, librarians, and artists, to learn and explore the ethics, techniques, best practices, tensions, and dilemmas of community-based oral history and Black memory work. 

The Seattle Black Spatial Histories Institute is one way, among many, that Wa Na Wari seeks to build collective power towards a future of Black ownership and belonging by rooting our work in a legacy of Black resilience, creativity, and self-determination. Training community members in the techniques and best practices of Black memory work is an important step towards shifting power around whose stories are told, how they’re told, and what place those stories hold in the shaping of Black futures.

“It’s really important for us to create a Black-centered space where people feel safe and welcome, and to be their full selves, but also to have a place that holds memory, for what the community was, but also for what we think the community can be.” Elisheba Johnson

Cohort members acquire skills in archival research methods, audio recording techniques, oral history interviewing techniques, transcription, story editing, audio editing, and public art proposal and activation processes. In the first year, they attend workshops, conduct research, visit archives, and record interviews with community members, preserving Seattle’s Black history for Seattle’s Black future.

In year two, each cohort member proposes and creates a public activation for sharing the interviews they’ve recorded. The institute culminates with an exhibit/installation at Wa Na Wari where cohort members share their work with the public. 

To increase accessibility to the program, Wa Na Wari provides cohort members with a stipend totaling $10,000 over the course of the two years.

Project partners include: The Black Heritage Society of Washington State, the Shelf Life Community Story Project, Seattle Public Library, The Mellon Foundation, and University of Washington Special Collections.

“The SBSHI exceeded my expectations. We were connected with a national network of Black oral historians who grounded us in the art and ethics of oral history and who inspired us to think about the endless possibilities of activation once the stories were recorded. I experienced inviting folks into the comfort and sometimes discomfort of their own memories, harnessing the power of silence to further extend the invitation, and holding the complexities of a non linear answer to an open ended question. I listen differently now.” Sierra Parsons

“As a long time Central Seattle resident and community advocate, I thought I had a deep knowledge of our community history. But I learned so much more about the amazing Black people who helped make Seattle the vibrant, diverse seaport city it is today. The professional oral history techniques I gained will help me document my own family history too.” Brenetta Ward

“Before participating, I didn't realize the weight and importance of having people from your community who know how to archive and collect stories, and I hope to continue doing so in my future. Learning how to use recording equipment, archive ethically, and foster relationships was amazing.” Ricky Reyes

2023-2025 Cohort

  • Troy Landrum

    Troy Landrum Jr. is a native of Indianapolis, IN and has lived in Seattle, WA for 9 years. His passion for reading and writing bloomed as he navigated a path of self-rediscovery through identity, faith, culture and his family’s migration stories from Jim Crow South to the Midwest. These intersections are at the helm of his human experience and literature process as a Black artist and oral historian. Troy graduated with a Masters in Fine Arts at the University of Washington Bothell and is currently a Program Producer for KUOW's RadioActive Program, a freelance journalist for the South Seattle Emerald, and a Novelist. His novel In Progress explores the question of "Home" through the Historical American time period of The Great Migration. A period in American history where millions of African American people moved from the South to Northern and Midwestern cities. He dedicates his work to the brilliance of African American History and the brilliance of his family history through the work of literature and preservation.

  • Nacala Ayele

    Born in Seattle, Washington, and raised in both the Central District and the Southend, Nacala comes from a background of art, community organizing, and healing work. As a jewelry artist, Nacala's art centered on jewelry making traditions of West Africa.

    While jewelry remains her first love, Nacala's art currently lives in the space of oral histories. Right now she is curating a collection of filmed interviews of Seattle-based Black Elders and their accounts of the ways they have experienced joy in the course of their lives. Nacala currently chairs the Board of Directors for The Tubman Center For Health and Freedom and sits on the Board of Directors for Inspired Child Community.

  • marco farroni leonardo

    marco farroni leonardo is a movement & performance artist, from Bonao, Dominican Republic & based in Seattle and New York. They hold a BFA in dance from The University of the Arts. Their work engages with themes and ideas around home, the body as archive, the Diaspora, and memory. Artistic collaborations include nia love, dani tirrell, David Rue, Aisha Noir, Nia-Amina Minor, Amanda Morgan, and Donald Byrd amongst others. They have presented work in various venues in Seattle including Velocity Dance Center, Wa Na Wari, Base Arts Space, 10 Degrees Arts, The School of Spectrum Dance Theater, and The Aids Memorial Pathway.
    Photo by Victoria Kovios

  • Mei'lani Eyre

    Mei'lani Eyre (they/them) is a child of Washington. A recent graduate of the University of Washington's Masters in Library and Information Science, Mei'lani combines cultural reconnection, reconciliation, and ancestral remembrance with information justice as a librarian and genealogist. Centering Black, Native, Queer and Trans communities in Seattle, Mei'lani has worked on a variety of cultural projects as the curator of digital exhibit LANDBACK: Establishing Sovereignty in the Urban Native Era, co-creator of the Black Panther Party Newspaper Digital Archive with Estelita's Library, and writer of the award-winning Black trans short film Transcendance.

  • William Butler

    William “Bill” Butler was born in Norfolk, Virginia, but was raised in Seattle, Washington. Bill supports the various missions and visions of organizations through the use of his skills and talents: Digital Storytelling, Audio Visual, Educator and Community Activist, and Cultivator of Children’s Dreams. He works for the Seattle Public Schools as a teacher and holds degrees in Urban Affairs from Connecticut College; Visual Communications from Seattle Central; Teaching from Heritage College; and Media Literacy from Antioch. He is an active member of Holgate Church of Christ. His favorite scripture is “What is essential is invisible to the eye.”

    Bill serves the community through his involvement with several organizations, including the Black Child Development Institute, the Black Genealogy Research Group, South End Stories and Multi-Care Communities. He feels that everyone needs a creative outlet. Wa Na Wari’s “Seattle Black Spatial Histories Institute” is an amazing channel to challenge his creativity.

  • Brooklyn Jamerson-Flowers

    Brooklyn Jamerson-Flowers is still pretty new to Seattle, has a couple of years of podcast creating/producing/hosting under her belt, and has loved history for a very long time. Podcast production and history first came together for her when she launched We the (Black) People: An American History Podcast in 2020. Then she moved to Seattle and it happened again with the Black Arts Legacies Podcast. And now, just as Seattle is starting to feel like home, it's all coming together with SBSHI.

  • Valerie Curtis-Newton

    Valerie Curtis-Newton: The Head of Directing and Playwriting at the University of Washington’s School of Drama, Valerie also serves as the Artistic Director for The Hansberry Project. Her recent work includes Steppenwolf Theatre Company, The Guthrie Theater, Seattle Repertory Theatre, Intiman Theatre, Denver Center Theatre, West of Lenin, ArtsWest, Mark Taper Forum/Center Theatre Group, New York Theatre Workshop, among others. Valerie holds a BA from Holy Cross College and an MFA from the University of Washington. She has been awarded the National Endowment for the Arts/Theatre Communications Group Career Development Grant for Directors, the Stage Directors and Choreographers Foundation’s Gielgud Directing Fellowship, Theatre Puget Sound’s Gregory Falls Award for Sustained Achievement, Seattle Times’ 13 Most Influential Citizens of the last decade, the Seattle Stranger Genius Award in Performance and the Crosscut Courage Award for Culture. Valerie is a member of the Stage Director & Choreographers Union and serves on its Executive Board.

  • Bitaniya Giday

    Bitaniya Giday is a first-generation Ethiopian American residing in Seattle.

    As a community organizer, she works to dismantle internalized carcel logics through storytelling, community care, and healing to incite imaginative capacities for abolition. Her first collection of Poems, Motherland, explores the preserved oral histories and experiences as a first-generation black woman, focusing on reflecting her own family's path of immigration across the world. As a cultural worker and university student, she works to restore autonomy to history's originators by researching black women's erasure and contradictory relationships to historical geographies.

2023-2025 Faculty and Staff

  • Zola Mumford

    SBSHI Co-Director
    Zola Mumford is an academic librarian, researcher, and writer. From 2003 to 2022, she was Curator of the Seattle Black Film Festival, a program of LANGSTON, a nonprofit arts organization. Mumford has served as a Washington State Book Awards judge and continues to be a speaker and panelist on subjects ranging from archival research to film history to science fiction/speculative fiction. Her professional background also includes media and arts production; historical research; and preservation work with film and print materials in university and private film and art archives.

  • Alissa Rae Funderburk

    Faculty
    Alissa Rae Funderburk is the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation funded Oral Historian for the Margaret Walker Center at the HBCU Jackson State University in Jackson, Mississippi. She maintains an oral history archive that, like the Center, is dedicated to the preservation, interpretation, and dissemination of African American history and culture. Previously, she created an oral history course for high school students at the Roger Lehecka Double Discovery Center and conducted freelance oral history interviews for the city of Jersey City.

    While completing coursework in the Oral History Masters Program at Columbia, Alissa Rae served as the Deputy Director of the Columbia Life Histories Project alongside its co-founder Benji de la Piedra. Her OHMA thesis on the religious and spiritual experiences of Black men in New York City was based on her studies of race, culture, religion, and the African diaspora, when graduating from Columbia College in 2012 with a bachelor’s degree in anthropology as a John W. Kluge Scholar. Alissa Rae is a native New Yorker, OHA council member, OHMA advisory board member, avid reader, and yoga enthusiast with a passion for travel.

  • Jill Freidberg

    SBSHI Co-Director
    Jill Freidberg co-founded Wa Na Wari and the Shelf Life Community Story Project. She is a documentary filmmaker, oral historian, radio producer, and youth media educator. Her work reflects her belief that responsible storytelling can build understanding and solidarity across borders and across the street.

    Freidberg has produced and directed four award-winning feature-length documentaries, including the ground-breaking collaborative effort This is What Democracy Looks Like (2000), and countless documentary shorts. She also teaches media production at the University of Washington Bothell.

2023-2025 Partners & Supporters

2021-2023 Cohort

  • Sierra Parsons

    Sierra Parsons is a community organizer who works and lives in southeast Seattle. She helps to lead WA-BLOC, a community-based organization rooted in the Rainier Beach neighborhood. Some of Sierra’s work includes advocating for and designing restorative alternatives to youth incarceration in King County, disrupting the relationship between police and Seattle Public Schools, and fighting for tenant rights to hinder displacement amongst a coalition of other community organizers and local political leaders. Sierra is invested in cultivating intergenerational leadership and elevating youth voice. She shares Ella Baker’s belief that knowledge of Black history is the foundation of grassroots collective action. In her free time, Sierra enjoys learning how to computer program, eating mac and cheese, and occasionally roller skating. ​

  • Ariel Paine

    Ariel Paine, father, music producer and local hip hop artist. Born and raised In the Central District. I love spending time with family, travelling, making music and doing art or archiving projects. Also known as ampfire 206, I use music to paint pictures of my life growing up in the district.

  • Brenetta Ward

    Brenetta Ward is a Seattle-based fiber artist, third-generation quilter and community advocate. Using cultural textiles, vintage photographs and symbolic embellishments, she designs narrative quilts that tell personal stories. Brenetta is committed to discovering, sharing and preserving her family history and helping others do the same. She serves on the boards of the Black Genealogy Research Group and Grandmothers Against Gun Violence Foundation. Brenetta believes we must tell our stories, write them down and claim our legacy for generations to come. If we don’t, we run the risk of being omitted from Seattle’s history.

  • Ricky Reyes

    Ricky Reyes is a Seattle-based, Tacoma-born, researcher, creative, and arts administrator. An avid musician, writer, and photographer, Rick finds community in creating with and performing alongside fellow musicians, writers, and creatives.

  • Akoiya Harris

    Akoiya Harris was born and raised in the Central District of Seattle, Washington and is a proud alumni of Garfield High School. She graduated from The Ailey School’s Certificate Program where she had the opportunity to gain a deep understanding of her body's relationship to movement through technique and choreography. While her main practice is dance, Akoiya also creates using poetry and collage. She is currently a company member with Donald Byrd’s Spectrum Dance Theater. Through her art, Akoiya hopes to give voice to the stories, both known and unknown, of her community and honor those who came before her.

2021 - 2023 Faculty

Kelly Navies​, Walis Johnson, Nikki Yeboah, Obden Mondesir, Alissa Rae Funderburk, Adrienne Cain, Cynthia Tobar

2021-2023 Partners & Supporters