Stories Archive

Stories

Norine Minion: Endowed with a commitment to equity and justice

Challenging cultural mores and institutionalized injustices underpins Minion's dedication to equity and racial justice — and her connection to The Pittsburgh Foundation.

Stories

Dannys Marrero: Images of protest and progress

Dannys Marrero is a Puerto Rico native, Army Reservist and political science student at Point Park University who now calls Pittsburgh home. For this photo essay, he selected images of civil unrest in Pittsburgh as residents protested killings by police and demanded equity and justice. He shared his thoughts on why these pictures are emblematic of the struggle and beauty of life during the pandemic and civil unrest.

Stories

Dr. Jerome Gloster: Resilience at the forefront of community-based health care

If there is an expression that defines Dr. Jerome Gloster, colleagues and friends agree, it is “realistic optimist.” Dr. Gloster, chief executive officer of Primary Care Health Services Inc., immediately after his appointment in 2018 focused on expanding the patient population at the nonprofit that provides an array of medical services to minority communities across Allegheny County. He developed an ambitious plan to build out clinic spaces and create state-of-the-art centers at Primary Care’s nine facilities, including the Alma Illery Medical Center in Braddock.

Stories

Dr. Yinka Aganga-Williams: Twenty years of creating refuge for immigrants in Pittsburgh

Aganga-Williams first came to Pittsburgh in 2000 to settle one of her daughters at Duquesne University. Twenty-one years later, she’s still here.

Stories

Nate Smallwood: Capturing Black joy and resilience

Smallwood is a photojournalist and documentary filmmaker based in Pittsburgh.

Stories

Wasi Mohamed: Experienced grassroots advocate joins Foundation’s public policy team

Mohamed joined the Foundation’s staff as its senior policy officer in May 2020.

Stories

Alisha Wormsley: Envisioning abundance for Black artists

Alisha Wormsley sparked controversy in 2018 when she posted the words “THERE ARE BLACK PEOPLE IN THE FUTURE” on a billboard in East Liberty, a rapidly gentrifying neighborhood in Pittsburgh.

Stories

Njaimeh Njie: Documenting ordinary life in extraordinary times

Njaimeh Njie is a photographer, filmmaker and multimedia producer whose work chronicles Black experiences, with a particular focus on how the past shapes contemporary life.

Stories

Keith Murphy: A community leader’s quest for learning and well-being in McKeesport

Murphy is founder and executive director of Healthy Village Learning Institute, an organization focused on bringing a holistic African-centered experience to Black residents of the McKeesport area.

Stories

D.S. Kinsel: Forging creativity and elevating the role of Black artists in Westmoreland County

D.S. Kinsel is an artist, art educator and co-founder of BOOM Concepts, a gallery, art and activist hub.