Monday, January 19, 2009

African immigrants help shape Portland's small black community

This section of Portland has turned into the best place for African immigrants to live and open businesses. DP

Benjamin Brink/The Oregonian

Nearly all of Sierra Leone immigrant Jestina Fasasi's clients at Salon Radiance are African American. Fasasi's salon is one of a handful of African-owned businesses on Killingsworth Street between Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard and Michigan Avenue.

In a stylish beauty salon on Killingsworth Street, Snoop Dogg thumps over the buzz of hair dryers and Barack Obama fliers are tacked to the mirrors. Salon owner Jestina Fasasi peeks through a plume of smoke rising from the hot curlers and gossips in a thick Sierra Leone accent with her African American client.

To the shop's left, an Ethiopian cafe bustles with a lunchtime rush, and the Nigerian-owned African International Food Market displays a sign saying the owner will return in an hour. Tucked in the heart of Portland's traditionally black neighborhoods, a little Africa is emerging.

On Martin Luther King Jr. Boulevard from Sacramento to Killingsworth streets and west on Killingsworth to Michigan Avenue, about a dozen African-owned businesses share the streets with longtime soul food joints and black barbershops and the new feminist bookstores and posh cafes ushered in by gentrification.

The African grocers, restaurants and beauty shops create a sharp visual of how Portland's black population is changing. As more African Americans move to the suburbs, an infusion of African immigrants is the only thing holding Portland's small black population of 35,000 steady.
Be sure to read the rest of this story! This is only a small part of it.

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