Hart House Innovation Fund builds community and enriches student experience

Feb 9, 2024
Getting a tattoo in the Great Hall during the Maamawi: Tattoo Gathering 2023, an initiative supported by the Hart House Innovation Fund. Photo credit: Matthew Volpe.

How can you see or measure impact? Four shining examples from 2023 illustrate how donors’ support of the Innovation Fund has led to life-changing experiences for U of T students and community members at Hart House.

The Hart House Innovation Fund was created as part of Hart House’s 100th Anniversary in 2019. It is vital in helping U of T’s Hart House continue to develop innovative programming.

Donors play an important role. “Through this fund, hundreds of donors have helped the House offer deep, life-changing experiences. For over 100 years, Hart House has been helping students find their place in communities that sustain them, often for a lifetime,” says Peter Wambera, associate director of advancement. “It’s critical that the House meet the needs of the current generation … and that’s exactly what this fund does.”  

The Fund also allows the House to connect with more individuals from underrepresented populations who might not assume there’s a place for them at Hart House.    

Here, we shine a spotlight on four initiatives supported by the Innovation Fund:

BEE

The Brotherhood of Ethnic Excellence (BEE) youth advisory program, part of Community Access & Outreach, is a stellar example of the impact of the Innovation Fund. In partnership with several Toronto District School Board high schools, BEE provides transformative learning, leadership skill development and mentorship for Black male-identifying students in Grades 9 to 12.

In 2023, BEE worked with Oakwood Collegiate Institute and Central Technical School, and hosted several events including a trip to the Hart House Farm.

Hart House student staff testimonials speak to BEE’s impact:

A group of teens hiking in a rocky area.

BEE cave walk at Hart House Farm.

  • “Being part of BEE brought me into a community of Black men who genuinely want to see the next generation of Black youth thrive. Every staff member was so inspiring, and dedicated to doing what was best for youth.”
  • “I can wholeheartedly say that this program played an integral role in helping me confront the challenges and intricacies of being a Black man – but more importantly helped me feel confident that the challenges and obstacles, though present, are not roadblocks.”
  • “BEE was successful because of the community aspect. As we built relationships, we empowered the youth to be the best versions of themselves.”
A group of teens hiking in a rocky area.

BEE cave walk at Hart House Farm.

Hart House Black Futures Barbershop

Another example of impact is from Hart House Black Futures, a series of programs using the lens of Afrofuturism to explore and present arts, dialogue and well-being. Part of Black Futures, the Barbershop drop-in was bi-weekly services running from September to November for Afro-textured hair. Barbershop was also part of the Black Hair Fair that took place during Orientation Week at U of T, in partnership with the Black Hub.

Hosted in the Hart House Map Room, with campus and community partners, including the Village Barbershop, the National Society of Black Engineers: U of T Chapter, University of Toronto Students’ Union, Black Students’ Association and Black Student Engagement, Barbershop offered services from fresh trims and healthy tresses to fly beats, eats and comfy seats.

Advertising image featuring a Black man posed next to the words "Black Futures presents Barbershop"

Barbershop offered bi-weekly services for Afro-textured hair.

Community Connector, Hip Hop Education, marcus singleton, aka iomos marad, was the special guest host.

Advertising image featuring a Black man posed next to the words "Black Futures presents Barbershop"

Barbershop offered bi-weekly services for Afro-textured hair.

“I love building community,” he said. “Engaging with people, being in conversation with them. How’re you doing? How’re you feeling? I like getting to know people and what they’re going through. As human beings, we need that interaction. Hart House is about connecting communities and connecting students.”

Hip hop’s 50th birthday

Another example of the impact is the special programming around hip hop’s 50th anniversary. This autumn, hip hop was applauded in a series of events at Hart House, York University and Toronto Metropolitan University.  In fact, hip hop’s 50th birthday party, “We Do It for the Culture: A Hip Hop at 50 Event Series,” spanned months.

From September to December (November being Hip Hop History Month), Hart House co-presented a novel, multi-part series with The Urban at York University and Roots Rhymes Collective.

The series acknowledged hip hop’s influence and contributions to culture, education and pedagogy, business and branding, and the collection of oral and archival histories.

Hip hop culture began as a trans-local phenomenon and has since become a global expression of culture, social activism, commerce, community building and storytelling

Marco Adamović, learning and community coordinator, elaborated: “The series focused on how hip hop culture began as a trans-local phenomenon and has since become a global expression of culture, social activism, commerce, community building and storytelling.”

Hip hop culture began as a trans-local phenomenon and has since become a global expression of culture, social activism, commerce, community building and storytelling

Adamović was part of the organizing team, which also included marcus singleton, aka iomos marad; Dr. Francesca D’Amico-Cuthbert, Hip Hop educator and program associate at Hart House; Dr. Rhonda C. George, postdoctoral researcher, McMaster University; Michele Geister, creator and producer of MuchMusic’s RapCity; and Jeff ‘Spade’ Duke, owner of Treehouse Records.

Maamawi: Tattoo Gathering 2023

A partnered event on October 20, Maamawi: Tattoo Gathering 2023, is another example of impact. The event was open to the public, but the primary audience for the tattoos was Indigenous youth 18 to 29 years of age. Three hundred people attended the event and 110+ Indigenous students and youth community members received tattoos. 

“This gathering is about love, healing and connection,” said Justin Moore, supervisor, youth engagement at the Native Youth Resource Centre, Native Child and Family Services of Toronto. He worked with Hart House and First Nations House, planning this event.

A female student getting a tattoo from a tattoo artist in the Great Hall.

Photo credit: Matthew Volpe.

Maamawi is an Anishinaabeg word that means together. That’s the spirit of the event,” he explained. “It’s about bringing community together to honour our ancestors and our traditional practices. It’s also about providing opportunity for our youth to practice ceremony and to hold space for healing.”

A female student getting a tattoo from a tattoo artist in the Great Hall.

Photo credit: Matthew Volpe.

Moore described what made this event so special. “When we gather tattoo artists from across the city, across the province and across Turtle Island, we provide the youth with a unique opportunity to access culture in a way that maybe they don’t have readily available to them.”

By Megan Mueller

Help students discover new passions at Hart House and experience a greater sense of belonging at U of T. Donate to the Hart House Innovation Fund today.

Make a gift