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In a political moment where everything from voting rights to reproductive freedom is under attack, actor and activist Kendrick Sampson is building infrastructure. 

As co-founder of the nonprofit BLD PWR, Sampson is building a central hub where Black communities can come together, share resources and organize for liberation and resistance, while also celebrating their joy. 

This effort is designed to establish lasting structures that unite people and address the ongoing challenges of the current social and political landscape.

โ€œBlack people are tired. And we should be,โ€ Sampson said. โ€œBut that doesnโ€™t mean we stop. It means we need to organize differently around what heals us, not just what hurts us.โ€

Moving from reaction to strategy

Radio host KG Smooth energizes the crowd during BLD PWR DAY event. Credit: Jimmie Aggison

Outside of his celebrity, Sampson consistently returns to his roots in Houston to leverage his platform and his love for the arts, music, film and storytelling to shift culture for good. For Sampson, that means reclaiming control over the things that are often exploited. 

He did that by hosting his first BLD PWR DAY, a two-day event that coincided with Juneteenth and celebrated Black liberation, joy and community in Houston. The event included a block party, film screenings, panels and a club karaoke party.

โ€œPeople outside Texas are making money off of our culture, our music, our fashion, our language. Meanwhile, the people who made that culture are under-resourced,โ€ he said. โ€œWe canโ€™t keep letting that happen. We can build our own systems with the genius we already have.โ€

At BLD PWR gatherings, youโ€™ll find DJs and line dancing alongside youth organizing and open forums on mental health, policing and reproductive justice.

Culture is one of our most powerful tools to shift narratives, strengthen the Reproductive Justice movement, and build toward collective Black liberation. Credit: Jimmie Aggison

Monica Simpson, executive director of SisterSong, the leading reproductive justice collective for women of color, has been a key BLD PWR partner. For her, the project is about filling the biggest gap in current movement work.

โ€œOur communities are facing overlapping crises, but weโ€™re often working in silos,โ€ Simpson said. โ€œReproductive rights over here. Economic justice over there. But we donโ€™t live single-issue lives. And our movements canโ€™t either.โ€

Thatโ€™s why BLD PWR doesnโ€™t silo its programming. Its model is deliberately intersectional, grounding the experience of Black people across gender, class and identity in shared strategy. 

โ€œIf you care about voting rights, you also have to care about reproductive freedom. About housing. About mental health,โ€ Simpson said. โ€œWeโ€™re in this together.โ€

Simpson shared that โ€œJoy as resistanceโ€ isnโ€™t just a catchphrase. Itโ€™s the medicine the community needs at this time.

โ€œ If our communities are inflamed with grief and burnout, joy cools us down,โ€ she said. โ€œIt restores us so we can keep fighting.โ€

That healing function is embedded in everything BLD PWR DAY creates, from its DJ-led open mics to its โ€œLiving Room Experience,โ€ where people gather in relaxed, home-like spaces to have raw conversations about politics, trauma and solutions.

Kamdyn West flew to Houston from Ohio to attend BLD PWR DAY Credit: Jimmie Aggison.

Ohio-based high school student Kamdyn West flew to Houston to attend BLD PWR DAY. She felt it was important for her to be present because of whatโ€™s happening in schools nationwide.

 โ€œI donโ€™t really learn Black history at school,โ€ she said. โ€œMostly, I find things online. But this, being here, talking to people, Iโ€™ve learned a lot.โ€

She hopes more young people find their way into these spaces. โ€œWe need more of us showing up. More real conversations. Not just scrolling,โ€ she said.

Thatโ€™s exactly what Simpson is counting on; young people are not just inheriting old strategies but creating new ones. 

โ€œThey are our next organizers, our next architects,โ€ she said. โ€œThey need to know the history, but also feel free to design a different future.โ€

I cover Houston's education system as it relates to the Black community for the Defender as a Report for America corps member. I'm a multimedia journalist and have reported on social, cultural, lifestyle,...