Kwanzaa Celebration at ECS!

December 19, 2025

Last night, the ECS community gathered for a joyful Kwanzaa celebration that blended education, creativity, and collective spirit. Rooted in African traditions and created in California in the 1960s by Dr. Maulana Karenga, Kwanzaa was designed to celebrate Black identity, culture, and community. Its principles have resonated far beyond the United States, with communities around the world embracing Kwanzaa as a time to reflect, reconnect, and recommit to shared values.

The educational portion of the evening was led by Maisha Sullivan-Oganza, a noted educator, social worker, and cultural leader whose work centers African-centered principles and empowerment. Maisha guided participants through the history and meaning of Kwanzaa, helping bring its origins and its seven principles to life in ways that felt both grounding and deeply relevant to the ECS community.

The celebration also featured music, storytelling, and plenty of festive energy. Sistah Mafalda led an engaging session that invited community members to take part in dramatizing the Akan proverb “Sticks in a bundle can’t be broken,” a powerful illustration of unity and collective strength that sits at the heart of Kwanzaa. Adding to the joy, ECS staff took to the floor for a fashion show that celebrated style, pride, and personality, reminding everyone that culture is lived, expressed, and shared. Together, the evening offered a beautiful reminder of the power of tradition, storytelling, and community coming together in celebration.