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BOMUS Students See Black History Made

MAYA MCFADDEN PHOTO BOMUS leaders and panelists Melanie Thomas, Dondi José Burroughs Sr, Gary Winfield, Shante Teel-Williams, Alisha Crutchfield-McLean, Gary Highsmith, and Jamie Baker-Vilsaint.

by MAYA MCFADDEN The new haven independent

Third and fourth-grade scholars at the Barack H. Obama Magnet University School sat in an audience looking at their future selves through the lens of a business owner, health professional, schools superintendent, state senator, and a motivational speaker/author.
That moment took place at BOMUS’ inaugural Black History Month Panel with leaders and change makers with roots in New Haven.
BOMUS Principal Jamie Baker-Vilsaint and Assistant Principal Melanie Thomas hosted Thursday’s event to inspire BOMUS students and celebrate local heroes.
“We’re all here because we deserve to be here,” Baker-Vilsaint said as students filed into the school’s gym. 

Students ready to ask questions during Thursday’s panel.

Thursday’s panelists included entrepreneur Alisha Crutchfield-McLean, health educator Dondi José Burroughs Sr., State Sen. Gary Winfield, Yale Smilow Cancer Hospital Nurse Manager Shante Teel-Williams, and Hamden Public Schools Superintendent Gary Highsmith. They sat under a projection that read “The Real Heroes of New Haven.”

For the first half hour of the event, panelists introduced themselves, reminded students that they matter, and offered them tips for their futures.
“Exposure is vital for the scholars that we service,” said Baker-Vilsaint, who came up with the event idea three weeks ago.
Highsmith gave four tips:

Fourth-grader Jules asks the panel a question.

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