There are events you attend.
There are events you enjoy.
And then some events quietly recalibrate you.
The kind that makes you sit in your car afterward a little longer.
The kind that follows you home.
The kind that tap you on the shoulder days later like, “Yeah… that mattered.”
February 19, 2026, at Macedonia Baptist Church in Mount Vernon was that kind of night.
Not flashy.
Not performative.
Not “look at us” energy.
It was “remember who you are” energy.
And that’s rare.
Before the Program Even Started, We Broke Bread
Before a microphone was lifted…
Before anyone took the stage…
Before the first official word was spoken…
We ate together.
We broke bread.
Plates were passed.
Smiles were exchanged.
Conversations flowed easily in the hall.
People who hadn’t seen each other in months caught up.
New faces were welcomed.
Elders were served first.
Laughter echoed softly through the hallway.
And that mattered.
Because community doesn’t start at the podium.
It starts in shared spaces,
in small conversations,
in warm greetings,
in familiar voices calling your name.
That moment in the hall set the tone.
We weren’t just attending an event.
We were gathering.
Before Anyone Spoke, the Room Was Already Talking
By the time people took their seats, the room was alive.
Elders greeting each other with both hands.
Young people straightened up when they realized this wasn’t background noise.
Community leaders and elected officials leaned in close, whispering ideas, plans, intentions.
Coats were folded neatly.
Programs were passed down the pew.
Smiles exchanged like, “Yeah… I’m glad I came.”
The atmosphere wasn’t rushed.
It was deliberate.
Like everybody subconsciously agreed:
Tonight deserves our full attention.








Kathy Brewington Didn’t Just Open the Program, She Set the Standard
When Kathie Brewington stepped up, she didn’t raise her voice.
She didn’t need to.
Her presence already had authority.
She welcomed everyone with warmth and clarity and took time to recognize the leadership in the room, especially Nicole Hines, NAACP Regional Director for the Mid-Hudson/Westchester region. She also acknowledged the elected officials in attendance, members of the Yonkers NAACP, and leadership from the Ann Sullivan Lions Club of White Plains.
That recognition mattered.
Because strong movements honor the people doing the work.
She reminded us why the NAACP still matters.
Why membership matters.
Why consistency matters.
Why support matters.
Participation matters.
Not when it’s trending.
Not when it’s convenient.
All the time.
Her words felt like accountability wrapped in love.
Like:
“We’re building something. Are you helping… or just watching?”
When Faith Shifted the Atmosphere
Then Minister Andre Coleman began the invocation.
And listen.
The room changed.
Phones went down.
Bodies settled.
Side conversations disappeared.
Drawing from Psalm 9:1–4, he reminded us:
“God is in charge.”
Simple sentence.
Heavy impact.
In a world that constantly tries to destabilize Black people emotionally, spiritually, and politically, that reminder felt grounding.
Like the room exhaled together.
Honoring the Shoulders We Stand On
A moment of silence was held for Rev. Jesse Jackson.
And it wasn’t rushed.
It wasn’t awkward.
It was sacred.
It held decades of sacrifice, organizing, and courage.

And seeing Dr. Rosemary J. Uzzo, 90 years old, in the front pew, still present, still invested, was its own sermon.
That is what commitment looks like.
Not seasonal.
Not situational.
Lifelong.
Kaitlyn Smith Didn’t Perform. She Affirmed.




Then Kaitlyn Smith stepped forward.
Calm.
Centered.
Unshaken.
She sang “Lift Every Voice and Sing” like she understood every lyric was a responsibility.
Then she spoke.
“Our hair is joy.”
“I love you, Black boy.”
And suddenly, the room softened.
Mothers leaned in.
Elders nodded.
Teenagers looked up.
She wasn’t reciting poetry.
She was speaking healing.
She was planting confidence.
She was reminding young Black people, out loud, that they are worthy of love, protection, and celebration.
That is nation-building work.
When the Room Expanded Beyond Mount Vernon
Mayor Shawyn Patterson-Howard connected our local experience to the global Black story.




Africa.
Brazil.
The diaspora.
She reminded us that Mount Vernon is part of something older than borders and stronger than systems.
You could feel people sit up straighter.
Prouder.
More connected.
Kenneth Jenkins Came With Truth , And AJ Woodson Held the Space
Then Westchester County Executive Kenneth Jenkins took the microphone.
No fluff.
No pandering.
Just truth.
“History is trying to be erased.”
That landed.
Then he shared the numbers.
42,000 registered voters.
About 6,200 participants.
Silence.
Because now we weren’t just celebrating.
We were confronting ourselves.
“You can’t agitate and legislate.”
Translation:
Being loud without being active is ineffective.
Being angry without being organized is wasted energy.
During the Q&A, AJ Woodson, Vice President of the Mount Vernon NAACP, served as moderator, guiding the conversation with clarity, respect, and purpose.
He made sure the dialogue stayed focused, meaningful, and rooted in solutions.
It wasn’t just talk.
It was strategy.
It was vision.
It was responsibility.
Kenneth Jenkins challenged us to turn passion into participation.
To turn complaints into commitments.
To stop spectating our own future.
When It Was Over, Nobody Wanted It to Be
When the program ended, nobody rushed out.
People stayed.
Talking.
Laughing.
Planning.
Exchanging numbers.
Hugging.
Strangers became collaborators.
Neighbors became partners.
It felt like watching a community recharge itself in real time.
Like something had been restored.
Days Later, It Was Still With Me
The next day, I thought about Kaitlyn’s voice.
Later, I heard Kenneth’s words in my head.
Then Kathy’s message resurfaced.
That’s when I realized:
That night didn’t end.
It embedded.
What That Evening Really Was
It wasn’t just a Black History Month program.
It was:
A mirror.
A reminder.
A responsibility.
A reset.
It reminded us that Black history isn’t something we visit once a year.
It’s something we live.
In how we vote.
In how we organize.
In how we support institutions.
In how we pour into youth.
In how we honor elders.
In how we show up.
From breaking bread in the hall to engaging in real civic dialogue, the Mount Vernon NAACP created a space where Black excellence wasn’t performative.
It was intentional.
And once you’ve been in a room like that…
You recognize it when it appears again.
You start valuing it differently.
You start making space for it.
Because spaces like that don’t happen by accident.
They happen when a community chooses itself.
And on February 19, 2026…
Mount Vernon chose itself.















Magnificent! Larnez Kinsey you captured every moment of February 19th so eloquently. Keep soaring. Don’t follow your dreams, “chase them”
Thank you Lois! I appreciate the love and encouragement more than you know. Always chasing. ✨💯
Thank you Larnez,
for placing me in that sacred space through your writing.
Two quotes with lasting impact were
“Being loud without being active is ineffective.
Being angry without being organized is wasted energy.” They spoke to the masses who didn’t show up to vote when it mattered most, now besiege the orange menace. Vocal spectators the most opinionated when they sat out, had the opportunity to move the needle and our fight forward. Gathering such as this one at Macedonia Baptist Church. Was like Campbell’s soup umm umm good.
Everyone loves what you guys are usually up too. This sort of clever work and exposure! Keep up the good works guys I’ve included you guys to blogroll.