My Joyful June: Pride, Progress, and Parks 🌈✊🏾
June was a month full of purpose, celebration, and heartwarming moments.
At Seva Equitable, we launched Pride Month projects that celebrated community, inclusion, and the power of coming together for one another. It was a joy to see so many people step in with compassion and creativity.
I also had the absolute delight of picking up my dear friend Azura and her beautiful new baby Ella from the airport—tiny feet, big smiles, and a whole lot of love!
June was also filled with movement—literally. I laced up for two special running races in Central Park: one celebrating Pride Month and another honoring Juneteenth. Both were powerful reminders of how we can honor history, identity, and resilience through community and action.
And to top it all off, I spent time at Seneca Village during a beautiful Juneteenth celebration in Central Park—a historic space made even more meaningful by the occasion.
June was a reminder that joy, justice, and movement can ALL LIVE TOGETHER. And I'm grateful to have felt all three.
Seneca Village was a 19th-century community of mostly African American landowners located in what is now Central Park. Founded in 1825, it sat near today's Upper West Side, approximately between 82nd and 89th Streets, from Seventh Avenue to Central Park West. It was a vibrant and self-sustaining settlement that provided Black New Yorkers with a rare opportunity for land ownership, community, and political participation, before being displaced in the 1850s to make way for the park. As we mark the 200th anniversary of Seneca Village's founding, I look forward to the upcoming events and the Permanent Commemoration that will honor this important part of New York City's history.
Performances from Juneteenth in Seneca Village: