- Karima Amin
- Susan Hodge Anner
- Sally Bittner Bonn
- Robin Brox
- Linda Drajem
- Christopher Fritton
- Jerome Joseph Gentes
- Margaret Konkol
- Pamela Plummer
- Sherry Robbins
- Gary Earl Ross
- Divya Victor
Karima AminBio
Karima Amin is a native of Buffalo, NY, who strives to preserve the art of storytelling in performances, workshops, and author visits for story lovers of all ages. From 1994-2005, her storytelling was a regular feature on WBLK-FM (93.7). In 2002, Karima was invited to share her stories in Senegal, West Africa. The author of a children’s book, The Adventures of Brer Rabbit and Friends (Dorling Kindersley, 1999), as well as several original stories which have been anthologized in African American Children’s Stories: A Treasury of Tradition and Pride (2001) and Grandma Loves You (2003), she also has produced several recordings of her retellings of traditional fables and folktales. Her CD, You Can Say That Again! (2004), earned a Parents' Choice Foundation Gold Award in 2005.
Artist's Statement
Knowing that every culture has its stories, I believe that storytelling is a perfect medium for teaching about the customs, traditions, and history of a people…. listeners come to know that we are united by common human experiences in spite of our differences.
Sample
an excerpt from A Tribute to Nation Builders
From “The Cradle of Civilization”
came a “First World” strength
to build a nation--
through the “Middle Passage,”
through slavery’s ravage,
through “Black Codes”
and lynchings
and destruction so savage.
But we survived
and nation builders still fight
for our freedom
and justice
and our equal rights.
To America they came,
not by choice,
to an alien land
where they had no voice
until they realized
a mighty truth for us all,
“United we stand; divided we fall.”
These fathers and mothers,
sisters and brothers,
were not lowly slaves
but Afrikan warriors
with a will to survive.
That’s why we are alive!

