
Culture & Civic Life
High Line
New York City's High Line is an aerial greenway inspired by the Parisian Promenade Plantée. It is the city's only elevated park and one of Manhatt...
Learn More
The southern Los Angeles community of Watts has always been a magnet for artists. After the Watts Uprising in 1965, a youth group converted an abandoned furniture store into a performing arts center and named it the Watts Happening Coffee House. In 1967, the group formed the Mafundi Institute in the coffee house, bringing together a collective of Watts artists, musicians, and writers under the leadership of Father Amde Hamilton of the pioneering political poetry group the Watts Prophets. In 1970, a new building across the street was used to house the Institute's expanding arts, culture, and social programs. Known as the Watts Happening Cultural Center — or more commonly, the Mafundi Building — the space continues to promote community engagement and Black empowerment.
In 2019, when the Mafundi building was threatened with demolition, a community coalition formed Friends At Mafundi (F.A.M.) to help sustain the history, culture, and traditions of Watts. Its immediate goal was to protect the Mafundi Building from demolition and prevent future threats by ensuring it is granted historical and cultural designations. By advocating for the preservation and restoration of the building, F.A.M. is leading the efforts to return the building to its place as one of the most prominent cultural arts centers in Los Angeles and transform it into a state-of-the-art cultural hub and exhibition space for the people, by the people of Watts.
General Operating Support
General Operating Support
Event Support