Lakeport Opera House
781 Union Ave | Laconia, NH 03246
Tuesday, May 6th | 2pm – 6pm
Program
1:30 – 2:15: Registration & Open Networking
2:15 – 2:30: Grounding & Mission Moment
2:30 – 3:00: Welcome
3:00 – 3:45: Keynote– Dr. Daniel Black
3:45 – 4:20: Reflection & Networking Break
4:20 – 5:20: Operationalizing the Optimism
4:20 – 4:40: Group Conversation & Guided Questions
4:40 – 5:20: Fireside Chat, featuring panelists Devon Chaffee, Miranda Dupre, Richard Ober, and Dr. Gisele C. Shorter.
5:20 – 5:30: Close
5:30 – 6:00: Reception & Open Networking
Featuring food from the Broken Spoon in Franklin, NH.
Speakers
Keynote: Dr. Daniel Black
Author | Professor | Consultant | Mentor
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Dr. Daniel Black is a 30-year professor of African American Studies at Clark Atlanta University. He is also an award-winning novelist, activist, mentor and public speaker. His published works include They Tell Me of Home, The Sacred Place, Perfect Peace, Twelve Gates to the City, The Coming, Listen to the Lambs, Don’t Cry for Me, and Black on Black. In 2014, he won the Distinguished Writer’s Award from the Mid-Atlantic Writer’s Association. The Go On Girl! National Book Club named him “Author of the Year” in 2011 for his best-selling novel Perfect Peace. Perfect Peace was also chosen as the 2014 selection for “If All Arkansas Read the Same Book” by the Arkansas Center for the Book at the Arkansas State Library. The novel has been reprinted more than ten times and is being heralded as an American literary classic. Dr. Black has been nominated (three times) for the Townsend Literary Prize, the Ernest J. Gaines Award, the Ferro-Grumbley Literary Prize, the Lambda Literary Award, he Georgia Author of the Year Prize, and the Mark Twain American Voice in Literature Award.
In 2015, Dr. Black’s The Coming was published to broad critical acclaim. The novel is a first-hand account of the trauma and triumph of Africans aboard a slave ship in the 16th century. Reviewers call this work “brilliant”, “poetic”, and “a literary homage to the lives of those Africans tossed into the sea.” National Book Award winner Charles Johnson says, “The Coming is powerful and brilliant.” He goes on to state, “This is a work to be proud of!” In 2016, Dr. Black’s long-awaited novel Listen to the Lambs was released. This novel explores the lives and agency of unhoused people who find each other on the street and create lives of meaning without material substance.
Dr. Black’s work has been justly celebrated. Pulitzer Prize winning author Alice Walker says this about Perfect Peace: “It is a spellbinding novel that kept me reading late into several nights. A young boy raised as a girl until ‘she’ was eight years old…. and then? Forced to be a ‘boy.’ It is a gift to have so much passion, so much love, so much beautiful writing so flawlessly faithful to the language of ancestors who grappled as best they could with more than they could ever understand. This novel will one day be a film of much benefit to us, if done well. The visuals of it will help us see what we are so often blind to: the great fluidity inherent in all things, including ‘race’ and sexuality. Thank you, Daniel Black.”
Dr. Black’s newest novel, Don’t Cry For Me, was released by HarperCollins on February 1st, 2022. About this novel, National Book Award winner Jesmyn Ward says, “Don’t Cry for Me is a perfect song: the epistolary dirge of a man singing to his son as he faces death by cancer. At turns intense and funny, tender and brutally honest, Jacob’s letter to his son, Isaac, is revelatory. It’s a beautiful book. Read it.” Black’s newest work is his first essay collection titled BLACK ON BLACK, which was released on January 30th, 2023. In response to this work, renowned Baldwin scholar Dr. Eddie Glaude says, “Black on Black is a tour de force. Brilliant. Passionate. Deeply caring. One reads these essays and feels immediately enveloped in Daniel Black’s love—even when he challenges you or when you might disagree. I really needed to read this book in these trying times.” Black also won the 2024 “Georgia Author of the Year Award” for Black on Black.
Dr. Black also works as a diversity consultant, having spoken at top-tier companies in America such as Google, Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, AT&T, and Global Payments. He assists corporations with creating work environments in which all employees, of every level and difference, feel supported and valued.
A native of Kansas City, Kansas, Black spent his formative years in rural Blackwell, Arkansas. He graduated from Clark College (now Clark Atlanta University) where he earned the prestigious Oxford Modern British Studies fellowship and studied abroad at Oxford University. He was then awarded a full fellowship to Temple University where he studied with Black Arts Movement poet laureate Sonia Sanchez and, in 1992, earned a Ph.D. in African American Studies. Dr. Black has spent the majority of his 30 academic years as a professor of African American Studies at his beloved alma mater, Clark Atlanta University.
Dr. Black lives in Atlanta and is the founder of the Ndugu-Nzinga Rites of Passage Nation, an initiation society for people of African descent who seek to love themselves and build a world of character for their people.
In January of 2025, Dr. Black’s 8th novel will drop, a literary sequel to Don’t Cry for Me, titled Isaac’s Song. His 9th, Simon Says, is finished and forthcoming. He is currently at work on part II of The Coming titled The Second Coming and a black scripture titled The Good Book.
Panelist: Devon Chaffee
Executive Director, ACLU NH
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As the Executive Director of the ACLU of New Hampshire since 2012, Devon Chaffee has overseen the organization’s major growth in membership and its success in protecting and defending civil rights in the Granite State.
Under her leadership, the ACLU of New Hampshire has made historic progress in the state, including repealing the death penalty, adding gender identity to the state’s nondiscrimination law, and enacting an overhaul of the state’s previous bail system. Devon’s fight for civil liberties in New Hampshire continues to be one focused on deepening relationships with communities impacted by injustice and disparities and fighting to create a more equitable Granite State for all.
Previously, Devon was in the National ACLU’s Washington D.C. Office, where she worked to stop biased policing, prisoner abuse, privacy violations, and free speech infringement. Prior to joining the ACLU, she served as Advocacy Counsel at Human Rights First, fighting against U.S. counter-terrorism and national security policies that violate human rights.
Devon has also served on the Governor’s Advisory Council on Diversity and Inclusion (2018-2021), the Inter-branch Commission on Criminal and Juvenile Justice Legislative Commission (2017-2021), the NH Coalition to Abolish the Death Penalty (2017-2021), and was the former Chair of the ABA Subcommittee on National Security and Civil Liberties.
She received her J.D. magna cum laude from Georgetown University Law Center where she was a Public Interest Law Scholar, and received her B.A. from Hampshire College.
Moderator: Dr. R. Jamaal Downey
Board Member, NHCJE
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R. Jamaal Downey is a dad to 5 children, son, brother, and avid meat smoker. He is currently an Assistant Research Scientist at the University of San Diego in the Shirley-Macos school of engineering as he is uncovering the scripts of whiteness within engineering education and research. He has lived in New Hampshire for over 25 years and considered this beautiful state his home.
Panelist: Miranda Dupre
BIPOC Community Navigator, Vital Communities
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Miranda Dupre joined Vital Communities as the BIPOC Community Navigator in June 2024 to foster a welcoming environment and support people of color in the Upper Valley on their journeys to home ownership and business ownership. A native of New Orleans, she made the move to the Upper Valley in 2022 to support her partner’s graduate studies, but has since found her home here. With a strong background in community engagement work and a Master’s in Environmental Justice, she is passionate about fostering community relationships and ensuring the futurity of the BIPOC community in her new home.
Panelist: Richard Ober
President & CEO, New Hampshire Charitable Foundation
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Dick Ober leads the New Hampshire Charitable Foundation, the largest private provider of nonprofit grants and student aid in northern New England. The Foundation manages more than $1 billion in charitable funds donated by hundreds of families and individuals, and awards some 7,000 grants and scholarships exceeding $60 million annually.
Dick has 30 years of experience in nonprofit management and civic affairs. Before coming to the Foundation, he held senior staff positions at the Society for the Protection of New Hampshire Forests and the Monadnock Conservancy. He has served on numerous nonprofit boards and public commissions, including several Gubernatorial appointments.
Dick served as a board member of the Center for Effective Philanthropy (CEP) and is founder and chair of the Community Foundation Opportunity Network (CFON). He is past chair of CF Leads.
Dick has written and lectured widely on community philanthropy, civic life, and the connections between people and the places they live. His work has been published in books, book chapters, magazines, and journals. He has been recognized with awards from the Environmental Protection Agency, the State of New Hampshire, and Plymouth State University, and has repeatedly been named as one of the state’s most influential people by leading NH business publications.
Dick lives with his wife and daughter in Dublin, New Hampshire.
Panelist: Dr. Gisele C. Shorter
President & CEO, Nellie Mae Education Foundation
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Dr. Gisele C. Shorter is the third President and CEO of the Nellie Mae Education Foundation, which funds community-rooted educational transformation that challenges racial inequities and advances excellent, student-centered public education for all New England youth. Foundational to Gisele’s career is the deep belief that an equitable society starts with an equitable education system. Over the past 15 years, she has led large-scale community-based programs and research and policy initiatives to advance justice and equity, close health disparities and ensure access and opportunities for Black and Brown youth and communities to flourish. Dr. Shorter most recently served as the Director of the National Education Strategy at the Raikes Foundation, where she was responsible for impact and strategy coherence across the K-12, post-secondary, education field building, and policy portfolios. Dr. Shorter is a Distinguished Senior Fellow at NYU Steinhardt Department of Administration, Leadership, and Technology and founding faculty member of NYU’s EdD in Leadership and Innovation degree program. She advises doctoral students on a wide range of complex problems of practice, from the role of philanthropy in China’s evolving socio-political context to the role of district superintendents as agents for change.
Across all aspects of her work and life, Gisele is a tireless education justice and equity leader. She is unapologetically committed to
building will and demand at a community level for the ideas of education justice (high-quality education for all children) and equity (regardless of race, SES, etc.);
advancing mechanisms to interrogate and respond to who is least well served by the current education and youth-serving systems (defined equity imperatives, feedback loops to understand student experiences and needs, and identifying access and opportunity gaps); and
ensuring that trust in community-based solutions and innovation is met with impactful outcomes.
Dr. Shorter earned her doctorate in education from Columbia University Teachers College. She holds a master's degree from Long Island University and a bachelor's degree from Amherst College. She is a Pahara Aspen Fellow and member of the Aspen Global Leadership Network.
Vendors
We are excited to announce that this event will have music provided by Teeba, and will be catered by the Broken Spoon.
Miriam Kovacs
Chef & Owner, Broken Spoon & Feenix
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Miriam Kovacs is the chef and owner behind Broken Spoon, a beloved culinary gem in downtown Franklin, NH, known for its bold flavors, innovative fusion, and benevolent dedication to community. With a commitment to nourishing both soul and palate, Miriam is in the process of launching Feenix, a prepared meal service designed to bring comfort, connection, and care to busy individuals and families.
At the core of Miriam’s work is a dedication to hospitality, humanity and tradition—values that inspire every ingredient and concoction she brings to life in her humble kitchen. Chef Kovacs believes we are all conduits, this commitment is evidenced by her thoughtful, ethical ingredient sourcing, prioritizing local and hormone/antibiotic-free, sustainably farmed produce, and a conscious effort to avoid ingredients from regions suffering from extreme resource mismanagement. By centering sustainability and ethical food practices, Miriam ensures that each bite not only nourishes your soul, but also encourages a system that values people, animals, and our future.
Chef Kovacs is honored to cater for the New Hampshire Center for Justice & Equity, providing food for the very leaders, advocates, and change-makers advocating to enforce a just and equitable future. Being trusted to feed those who uplift others is a blessing—and a responsibility she carries with pride.
Broken Spoon & Feenix stand are not business ventures; they are movements— commitments to declaring our right to thrive and exist in good health.
Thomas Forbes
Thomas Forbes, Teeba
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Teeba is a bassist, producer, multi-instrumentalist, and songwriter hailing from Seacoast NH, USA.
Masterfully navigating diverse styles, and having collaborated with artists such as Eminem, DMX, Nas, Denaun Porter, Dave East, JID, DJ Drama, Ceelo Green, and more, Teeba's musical journey encompasses a rich tapestry of experiences, making him a sought-after collaborator in the industry.
Matthew Anderson
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Hi, I’m Matthew Anderson, a professional photographer based in Portland, Maine. With nine years of experience behind the lens, I specialize in capturing authentic moments that tell a story. Whether it’s an event, a portrait session, or a breathtaking landscape, I strive to create images that leave a lasting impact.
Beyond photography, I’m passionate about the outdoors—hiking, exploring lakes and beaches, and embracing the beauty of nature. I also love cooking and the creativity that comes with it. At the heart of everything I do is a deep belief in equality, kindness, and the power of love.