Debra 'Ibitayo' Butler |
The second was shortly after when she told me about a very small private school named Africa-Care Academy in Oak Cliff, Dallas, Texas, that was doing some very progressive things with children. They were learning about their history, culture, and challenged to embrace their own greatness all while excelling academically. This experience began as young as two years old and extended through the eighth grade. Although I never in a million years thought Dallas, Texas would ever see the light of day with me in it again, Africa-Care Academy piqued my interest. It slowly became a mainstay in my thoughts about this tiny person growing inside of me. Finally, I had given birth to a beautiful baby girl, graduated and took off shortly thereafter to Dallas, Texas with the intent on staying for three weeks or forever…
Over the years people have often commented on how intelligent my children are, well spoken, ambitious, talented, etc. In my mind I always think it is because of a few factors: genetics, A LOT of hard work, and growing up and being educated in a small private school in Oak Cliff, Dallas, Texas, called Africa-Care Academy under the leadership of Debra “Ibitayo” Butler. Amatulla was eight months old when we finally made it to Africa-Care Academy where I worked for the next eleven years. Ayade was born there [figuratively speaking]; her name [meaning the joy of our lineage] came from the Yoruba Language we learned from Sister Ibitayo. My beautiful babies were surrounded by love, academics and culture at Africa-Care Academy because as much as I am a mother to my daughters, so is Sister Ibitayo.
My children grew up at Africa-Care Academy, learning how to walk and talk there. As they grew older, that turned into marching, saying ‘The Black Child Pledge’, ‘Ode to the Ancestors’, knowing all fifty-four nations of Africa, learning about our history beyond what is written in the standard issued text books, as well as Reading, Writing and Arithmetic. Africa-Care Academy built and enriched both their academic and cultural foundations. I would never trade our experience there for anything in this entire world.
“I am Debra Ann Butler. I’m also known as Sister Ibitayo. I am the Founder/President of Africa-Care Academy. I was born here in Dallas, Texas. My parents are Mattie and George Butler. My mama comes first because my mom did the primary raising. I have four sisters and one brother. I have a daughter. I went to school here in Dallas; graduated from South Oak Cliff in 1975. I went to Roger Q. Mills, George Washington Carver, and Oliver Wendell Holmes. After graduating, I went to college, majored in Political Science. Returned to Dallas, got bored, went to Los Angeles and met some interesting people. Those people would help me evolve and start Africa-Care Academy.”
You said you went to college to study Political Science, what was your goal at that time?
“My primary ambition then was to become a Corporate Lawyer. For some reason as a child, I wanted to be in Law. It just fascinated me to look at Perry Mason and to see how Lawyers conducted themselves in court, knowing the law. For some reason I wanted to go into Corporate Law, I wanted to be in control of finance and trade.
I think primarily because my mother worked at Neiman Marcus. Working at Neiman Marcus sometimes I saw the different wares from different countries and she was always happy to say this came from this place or this came from that place. I wanted to go into Corporate Law because I could really make money working for some big corporations instead of working for individuals. I think that is primarily why I wanted to go into Corporate Law.
I found ME!!! |
As a teenager, I kind of swayed away from the protest movement because it became all about boys, dance and having a good time. I thought about politics but not as seriously as I did when I was a very young child. As a child I listened to the elections because I was around people who cared about who was running for President. At the time, we had Lyndon B. Johnson and Johnson was running against this George Wallace from Arkansas, I think, and he wanted to send Black Folks back to Africa.
I can remember my Aunt [saying] ‘I am not going back to Africa! I am not an African! I am not going back to Africa!’ But I said, ‘Well, we’re Black!’ She said ‘No, don’t EVER say that!’ Back in the ‘60s, they started calling us Black People but she said ‘Don’t say that, we are Negroes! It’s better to a Negro than to be Black.’ For some reason, she felt it was better to be a Negro.
As time evolved we became Black and I don’t know if my Aunt ever embraced the term ‘Black’ but through her Political comments I became interested in Politics. She was always listening and keeping up with events so that kept me aware of what was going on. While I was in college, I began to understand the events and issues that I had been previously been exposed to in regards to Black People, independence, and especially segregation. It was at the end of segregation, I saw a little bit of it. I felt proud when I went to Ohio State because I was the first of a new generation opening up the gates to Ohio State.
I felt like I had a duty to do and that duty was to make sure more black students get a chance to go to college and to have a better chance at succeeding in their careers than I did. I felt that even though I had graduated from high school, I did well in school, I made decent grades, I wasn’t an ‘A’ student, I wasn’t an honor student. I graduated early but I didn’t really consider myself to be smart. Smart only when I applied myself but not a born genius. I felt like I had to do more. The next generation, in the ‘70s and ‘80s, had to be more prepared for college and knowing who they are. We had kind of drifted away from that. I decided that maybe I can do something, but I really wasn’t sure. Teaching wasn’t even a thought. I thought maybe I’d go into Politics.
For a while, I worked with a group called the Ohio Public Interest Campaign. I saw how hard it was, politically, to get issues on the ballot, to lobby, to just get anything done and even the timeframe given for an official to be effective. By the time you are elected to office and learn how everything works, it’s time to leave or campaign again. It leaves very little time for a new person to really get anything done. There had to be a better way of making social changes and I still hadn’t thought about teaching. But there had to be a better way. I really didn’t know what that WAY was, yet.
After leaving Ohio State, I came back to Dallas and I worked for a newspaper company, called the “Dallas Times Herald”. While there, I wrote a few commentaries. Because my view was not welcomed, they told me not to write them anymore. Also while in college, I became what they call ‘blacklisted’. My ideas weren’t accepted by the teaching professionals, matter of fact before I graduated I had to switch to the African Studies Department even though I was still in Political Science and International Studies. I had to go through African Studies in order to graduate because my counselor in Political Science had dropped me.
I had no advisors and at Ohio State students are advised from the moment you enter school until you leave to always be with an advisor because the course load is so enormous and sometimes courses are not offered each and every year or not offered in the day or at night. Your advisor is going to keep you abreast to the changes in the course offerings and tell you where you stand as far as graduation and how you can sometimes get around things. I had to go the African Studies Department for counseling, which turned out to be a very good thing. My counselor was the head of the African Studies Department and through that association I got a chance to take even more classes and get closer to some of the professors who were teaching African Politics.
Love of Africa |
The way he taught it [the course] made you just fall in love, seriously in love, with Africa. It made you really proud to be an African and eager to learn more about Africa and its political history and how it related to our history and vice versa. Some of the reading was from AAPRP required reading; I definitely wanted to be a member of the All African People Revolutionary Party because of their interest in educating the masses and especially college students.
My interest in black studies and politics led to my association with some other student organizations, including women’s studies group. AAPRP invited people like John Henry Clarke, I remember John Henry Clarke because he was blind and when he came to Ohio State, the woman’s group that I was a part of clashed. One of the reasons was because the AAPRP felt that the women’s group, which was more integrated, pushed the book by Michele Wallace called Black Macho and the Myth of the Superwoman.
This was a serious book about the intimate relationship between black men and women. The women’s group that I was working with had invited Michele Wallace, and she and John Henry Clarke were on the stage together. Her book discussed how men, black men, were not intellectual but instead physical. Black men are proud of their reputation to seduce and satisfy sexually. After the Civil Rights Movement in the ‘60s and early ‘70s black men took on more of the Mack type. The men were projected as Macks in public media to replace the Revolutionary type. Respectable organizations including the brothers from the Panther Party kind of went into being the Mack. For this reason, she wrote about in the book. The Superwoman was the black woman, she could do anything, she could raise her children by herself, and she could solve all the problems of her family, her nation. She was supernatural.
This was a memorable night because of the topic and feelings expressed by both panelists. Michele Wallace was supported by the women’s group. Members of the AAPRP, especially the brothers, felt the feminist group mainly supported her because she was kind of downgrading black men’s statuses and that’s why her book was so important to them and that they were promoting it.
John Henry Clarke, of course, on the other hand, being more intellectual and an elder explained the historical and political events that brought us to that point and what was necessary to get us back on course. In concluding, John Henry Clarke embraced Michele Wallace. John Henry Clarke did not discredit her view. He let her know was it was good for her write what she felt; it was good for her to express it and not to be ashamed of what she’d done because she was writing what is real to her.
I am a revolutionary |
The feminist movement from Seneca Falls to present has made attempts to counter the black revolutionary. Matter of fact back in the 1920s, Ida B. Wells Barnett was involved with the feminist movement but when she married, they felt she was not a true feminist anymore. She and Booker T. Washington would open the way for Marcus Garvey. Booker T. Washington initially invited Marcus Garvey to this country, even though he did not get a chance to meet Garvey due to the fact Booker T. Washington was found dead before Garvey arrived.
The story goes on that even so Ida B. Wells Barnett and the others at that time organized the Silent March and the Silent March was partly about that, there was no need to speak. There was nothing needed to be said, everything had been said, it was just time for action. It was probably the most interesting parade that has ever taken place in this country – the Silent Parade and you don’t hear very much about it but I think it’s something we need to review in history. Marcus Garvey’s famous photograph with the general regalia and feathered helmet was taken that day at the parade.
Ohio State prepared me for a higher calling and that calling I didn’t really realize for another decade. Upon returning to Dallas, I worked at the Dallas Times Herald. Money was good but I hated the environment, I financed progressive activities but I saw little progress. Society encouraged us to integrate and forget about the past, forget about who gave us hell all of these years but that wasn’t the purpose of integration. The purpose of integration was to get a better education and eventually to feel more social freedom.
Sharing knowledge |
Integration, education, and life have given me insight and a reason to prepare another generation so that they will not allow ourselves to digress to the Mack stage. Many changes have been made but things are still not like they should be. In order to be accepted we shouldn’t have to give up our pride and identity. When I see black women thinking that wearing false hair and nails, having to put on a whole different persona, other than just being proud of their naturalness, this lets me know that things have indeed changed - we are digressing. You should be able to have your natural hair and get any job you please and no one should make any fuss about it because you are God’s creation so you shouldn’t have to undergo a metamorphosis in order to be accepted.
Even though integration has come, I still see women doing things that we shouldn’t be doing. I have seen women sexually harassed by men on the job. I’m so happy I am college educated. I learned to preserve, work hard, and survive on my own. It was an initiation into adulthood. I don’t have to take insults from men in order to keep a job. It made me feel sad that there were woman who were younger than me who were accepting this in their life because maybe they didn’t go to school long enough; maybe they weren’t taught to be proud of themselves or that they were much more valuable than these jobs. We have to think highly of ourselves in order for other’s to think highly of us.
Carter G. Woodson said there are two types of education: one you get in the classroom, the other one you give yourself. So I had to go on a journey. That journey took me to Los Angeles and there it was like a Mecca. Another serious movement resurfaced after the Civil Rights Movement with music of Bob Marley, Peter Tosh, and Jimmy Cliff ignited the fires for social equality again. It seemed to be another movement and Reggae was at the head of it because revolution was put to music. Lyrics loaded with substance brought about this new energy. This new surge of energy and a new chapter in the liberation struggle.
Entrepreneur |
Out there black folks were more independent, there were more entrepreneurs, street merchants, just people who believed in self-sufficiency, just doing for self. It was kind of like what we see now a days in the Mexican Community. We had people selling food, people selling wares, little storefront in front of storefronts selling incense; black folks were busy and creative.
Children in the arts |
There was the Kawaida Center. The Kawaida Center was headed by Maulana Karenga and the US Organization. The Kawaida Center was held lectures every Sunday, so every Sunday from somewhere around 3 o’clock – because they didn’t interfere with church time, so it was from 3 o’clock to maybe 7 o’clock – Maulana Karenga would teach African History. And you are talking about an interesting [lecture]… I mean interesting… it was so interesting. The Republic of New Africa had a lecture series always going on. They mainly told history through videos and visiting lecturers. Matter of fact, I met Ashra Kwesi there. Ashra Kwesi made his first journey with Dr. Yosef ben Jocannan [Dr. Ben] and did a lecture series. I was there when he did his first presentation at the Malcolm X Center on Broadway.
LA was a place of learning, it was a place of growth and maybe a third renaissance, like in the 20s after Africans were freed and began to really enjoy the freedom that we had gained and began to think poetically, musically, created Jazz and Bebop, dance, that freedom of expression is known as the Harlem Renaissance period. It was a new explosion of expression but this expression was a little bit different because it was directing us toward Africa, going home and loving who we are. It was different and I think the earthquake of the late ‘80s kind of disturbed that movement and the removal of Khalid Muhammad from the Nation of Islam because Khalid was a big player in the African Movement.
Academic Excellence |
Toward the end of my tenure in Los Angeles, I became associated with Marcus Garvey Schools. The Marcus Garvey Schools, the way it operated - was still too revolutionary for Dallas, Dallas is still not ready for that. Marcus Garvey Schools has always been funded with black money and the teachers are non-certified. Dr. Anyim’s philosophy was that… and I was one of the few college educated teachers that he hired and one of the reasons he told me that he accepted me was because it didn’t seem like I was as Europeanized as some other professionals when they go to college. Even though Dr. Anyim has a PhD., he was still able to function in a way that he cared about his community and he was able to train teachers to be productive and to love who they are.
Dr. Anyim was very serious about his mission and because of the way he was, he help mold me into being a more productive worker. At first I went to the job, I showed up, I wasn’t very punctual, but Dr. Anyim, he would make you sprint to punch in because he was so serious about being on time, being in the classroom, being productive, being ready. Another thing that I enjoyed about what he did is that he gave us the kind of training that was necessary for us to accomplish his mission.
Africa-Care Academy Students |
The school taught Kiswahili, the teachers had to take Kiswahili. We had to go to school, he sent us to school at night and we had to report. You made sure you went to school to study your Kiswahili! Also, we had to take African Studies and we took that from him. It wasn’t during class time, it wasn’t during school hours and it was set for two nights a week. So two nights a week the teacher had to go for Kiswahili and African Studies. It was managed very well because he was very punctual – start on time, end on time – but it was mandatory. We didn’t get paid extra for it but it was part of what the school was about and we did it. Every person that I knew that worked there grew to enjoy it because it enhanced them. It was an enhancement; it made you a better person. Also in the process of teaching us, because it was the Marcus Garvey Schools, we had to study all the precepts of the UNIA; we had to learn about a lot of the ideas and philosophies of Marcus Garvey. He really kind of molded us into being Garveyites, so it was a beautiful experience.
Outdoor Drumming & Dancing |
Before I moved back here, my mom and I were having this discussion. She said ‘Well, what are you going to do?’ I said ‘I’m not sure… I could teach.’ She told me ‘You should start your own school.’ That was the first time I had ever thought about that. I had never really thought about it until that point. When I came back to the city, I worked for corporate to get myself established. I had a friend, her name was Imani Akuaku; Imani and I had become friends while she was living in California, and she moved to Texas before I did and started having babies. Then because she and I had already had experience out in California, we didn’t want to send our children to public school. [She said] ‘Where is Akua going to school?’ I said ‘With me!’ So she said ‘I’m going to bring mine.’ And that’s how Africa-Care Academy got started.”
“It was in 1992.
She brought her two and the next thing I know, her friend happened to be Sister Isis [Owner of The Institute of Ancestral Braiding] brought her children, and then from Sister Isis, Brother Bandele [Owner of Pan-African Connection Art Gallery Bookstore & Resource Center] brought his child and those were my first students - from those families.
When I started in ‘92, I started as a Saturday School and Stephen Meeks’ daughter was a spokesperson for the other children and she said ‘Sister Ibitayo, I don’t mean any disrespect but we go to school Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday is just too much!’ I said ‘Enough said! I can really overstand because I agree with you!’ And I agreed with her, Saturday was a bit too much so I decided not to do the Saturday School ever again because I just felt like people don’t realize… I relate to my childhood a lot, especially how I felt about school and I think that’s what makes me a good teacher sometimes because I can relate back to when I was a child. I probably would have dropped out if you said I had to go to school on Saturday, I had a hard time going to school on Monday thru Friday and I surely would have dropped out if they had the schools that we have today. So I understood where she was coming from so I decided ‘Let me just try this during the week.’
I went to trying to do this during the week and the children appreciated it more. My daughter was a first grader; I think one of the Akuakus was a first grader, the rest of them were still very young so it was okay for them because it was like a daycare but an African-Centered daycare. I remember when I decided to officially start Africa-Care Academy, I informed everyone not to bring anyone under five [years old]. Most of them showed up with five and under, I was like ‘Oh Lord!’ because I had children late in age so I wasn’t like a children person. I liked children – teaching them – but that really early, early [age], I was like ‘Ya’ll just don’t know me; I’m not really this type of person.’
The Future Leaders |
Eventually more school age children began to come but that is how it started with the Akuakus and with me moving back to Dallas, meeting Imani with her children cause she had a nice little following, she had four children. I was able to educate two of them and then they moved away then Sister Isis came. They were beautiful little children and thank God they were able to come. Sister Isis, she was the one who bought ‘The Little Red Caboose’, because I didn’t know any of those songs, so she knew a few of those songs and I incorporated them, this got the children moving around, dancing and stuff.
I was able to recruit some good help. Sister Katanga came to teach art, very esoterically and ingenious in her approach toward art. The children enjoyed it and enjoyed her instructions. Another Sister, Sheila Berry, she was my very first assistant. Sister Sheila was really, really good with children. She was a genius with getting children to tie their shoes. She was one teacher who insistent that she was not going to tie any shoes. I don’t know how she managed to do it. She scared them to death or whatever, but they knew how to tie their shoe laces. Then there was Sister Iranema, she was good too.
This was all at Alsbury Street, we had fun on Alsbury because we had a big garden, we were on about an acre of land, the children had plenty of room and they could throw a football without it going over the fence. There was a carport and some children who had never ridden a bike before could ride because I had children’s toys, tricycles. They could ride the little tricycles and bicycles. We even had a goat! The children would feed the goat and the goat was spoiled because it would get fresh apples and fruit.
Cultured |
The Akuakus, Imani, the lady that bought her children at first, she gave me the goat. She had a whole herd of them out in Pleasant Grove, the country part. They had a really big back yard and they had about ten goats back there. She was married to a brother from Africa and this sister made her own soap and everything. Do you know, to this day I still have a bar of her soap? That’s how I remember her, because eventually Imani passed away.
She and I together started the Kwanzaa Parade [in Dallas] because when she was out in California she was the co-founder of the original Kwanzaa Parade. Imani was a genius to me because of her creativity, her talent and her ability to work with colors and costumes. When we were out in California, California is really like a kind of wild people place and Imani would take a place and she’d put cloth on the walls. The way that she would drape those walls it was like you were walking into somebody’s pad from North Africa or the Middle East. She had that kind of vibe going on. The way she would robe herself in the beautiful, flaring colors, to me it was romantic – her and her mate – they were like people you would see from a different era but they were here.
Exploring |
I had to come back and share that with Dallas of course. Because of what I’ve learned through those experiences, what I learned in the classroom, I wanted to share that with children but in a way that would encourage them to go out and learn, explore, travel and get the education in the classroom, and in the street which they give themselves. I always tell them ‘You have to give yourself an education that means that you have to get out there; you have to explore.’ It may not necessarily mean getting on a boat or a plane and going to a foreign place but what it means is that you have to do something to educate yourself. I got as much as I can get from the teacher; now I need to go explore. Take what I got from the teacher and just stretch it to test these theories, find answers to those questions that we didn’t know the answer to long ago. Now we have the technology to know more, it wasn’t like some of the stuff was just hidden from us, it’s just now we have the technology.
Getting back to Africa-Care Academy, I wanted to open a school primarily to help my child because I couldn’t see myself going to corporate America everyday while my child was being dummified. I felt like even with the early education I had given her I had invested money in my child. I wanted my child to become productive not just for the larger American society, which I feel like in a way she is going to be productive – which will be a benefit – but I want her to be a benefit to the struggle. Sometimes I think I accomplished a little of that but not much. Then I say ‘Maybe not today but maybe later.’
Reconnecting with Africa |
I feel like when I reflect on those great people who have gone before us - Harriet Tubman, Sojourner Truth, and so many more, even Mary McLeod Bethune, I think about how they wanted so much for us, so much for the progeny which is now, now with us, they wanted so much for us and how I want so much for us. So when I go into the classroom at school I want so much for every child to do good because I feel like their success is my success. If they are not getting it then there is something I’m doing wrong. Even if they don’t stay even but only for a little while I want them to leave with some kind of impression, get something more.
Drumming in the breeze |
Just like we found that we are born with all the eggs that we are going to produce; as an infant we are born with those. How productive they become is based on the lifestyle you live. We want to take care of our bodies so we can produce good eggs. We want to take care of our children so they know that because of the love, because of the attention, because of the education we have provided for them that one day they can turn around and say ‘I love you.’ I tell them [the students] the most vulnerable members of society are the babies and the elders and those in between - our duty is to take care of the babies and the elders.
Standing at the feet of Giants |
Sometimes I think about my methods of educating and when I was younger, a few years younger, I think I was harder as a teacher. Harder in terms of tolerating misbehaving, children just not being cooperative, but as I’ve matured I’ve tried to treat young men a little bit more like family because I don’t want to cause young men to hate black women because they are too hard. But also to understand that there are black women who are firm, black women who are not going to be prissy, but they will love them and respect them and expect the same in return.
As I was evolving as a teacher and a mom I wanted to always make sure I didn’t punish the child unnecessarily or wrongfully punish a child; I wanted to give the children the respect I wanted as a child. I felt like it’s important to try get to understand children’s feelings, that’s why I’ve never been in favor of calling them ‘kids’, deeming them. That’s why I started the Kwanzaa Parade because I felt like our children needed to feel like they are cherished and that we exalt them in that way. That we want to demonstrate our power and creativity so we can encourage them to grow up, to live and do great things. That was really the main purpose behind the Kwanzaa Parade.
With the school – to educate them in way that they could be proud of their origin and want to come back and be beneficial to our struggle here in North America and reconnect with our African Brothers and Sisters over on the continent of Africa. Even transplant themselves back to the Mother Land. And get the most out of our education regardless of whether it’s a Black Institution or an integrating institution, wherever, but get the most of it and they go and feel firm and grounded and confident in any situation because of knowing their ethnicity, they know they have a past that goes way beyond the slave years. From the beginning, our civilization that we started in Africa with the Pyramids, it’s still glorified today. So they can go back to the Mother Land and see it for themselves and know that they are the proud builders of such greatness. I always tell them ‘You are the same people! You just changed clothes and you speak a different language now but you are the same people.’ Just like they say ‘As it was in the beginning so shall it be the end.’
Sister Whaley & Sister Ibitayo |
The government sometimes seems like it doesn’t intend for me to grow but I have to keep pushing because I know it is necessary. It’s still a child [Africa-Care Academy] but I want it to be an adult real soon. I want Africa-Care Academy to evolve; it may involve having a new leader, lead by another generation but it is important that it does. With life you never know what a child is going to be all you can do is your best and cultivate that child because you just never know - the one that you thought didn’t seem to do much may turn out to be the one pull everybody up. I’ve seen some phenomenal things happen.
Now I just try to motivate, there was a time when I thought I was smart, but as I’ve gotten older I think I’m okay. I think as time goes on I think it’s important for an educator to continue to be educated. That is one of the important things about being an educator is that you continue your education, learning is a continuous process. As time changes you just have to keep growing. In the classroom with the grade levels that I still have I am continuously learning through self education so that I can continue to give my students more and more…”
Africa-Care Academy today |
Sister Ibitayo pushes her students to learn beyond what they would normally learn in a public school environment. The coursework may seem tough at times, however, children are adaptable and they learn, absorb and ultimately process information very quickly. Children have the ability to learn far more than we can even begin to imagine. Cultivating that ideal, as she does, helps them soar beyond our most grandiose expectations.
“I feel like how our children are educated it retards us, we have to go through slow rank of graduating from grade to grade, which takes us twelve years. When you look back at the great Kings of Africa most of them started ruling when they were twelve or thirteen years of age. Menelik, these people started ruling when they were twelve years old. Even Haile Selassie, he was given first governor over a certain providence at the age of twelve or something like that. So it’s the kind of educational processing that really dummifies us because it takes too long to become mature and it doesn’t go with nature. By nature, we become adults when we reach puberty – but it [the educational process] doesn’t go with nature.
I was reading some of the works that the early Black Psychologist wrote about children and they said that between the ages of one and seven is when we have the greatest brain span and that is why it is important that we educate our children as much as possible between the ages of zero and seven. Black children, it’s different for white children, the brain development is different and that’s why black children need to be educated in a way that caters to their growth so that after seven then… because if you have given them as much as you can from zero to when they reach seven years of age then black children need to start building upon those things.
Leaders of tomorrow |
That’s what I recognized when I went to college, the playing field wasn’t balanced. Some of the things that I learned in high school were so remedial compared to my white counterparts. They knew about Freud and they knew certain things in Biology. We had Biology but it was a choice where you choose to take it and some classes shouldn’t be a choice, we need them. We need it because even if you are just a parent and that’s it at least having a good understanding of Science will help you administer cough medicines, help you take better care of your children. Even if you are a housewife, just having a good understanding of Math and Science will just help you do the right things.
Founder/President |
It has been very hard, sometimes when I look at my other classmates, friends and peers and look at where they are; most of them are retiring or retired. It makes me kind of sad because I’m still working, I don’t have any plans to retire soon - which I can’t. So I wonder what’s in store for me. [One day] someone will step forward and take the reigns and will be the PERFECT person. That’s very important to me.”
Sister Ibitayo has held down Africa-Care Academy, operating almost purely off tuition, for the last twenty years in a time when most businesses fail within the first five years. She works hard, harder than most people I know, to ensure the students at her school excel academically AND culturally. During our tenure there, Sister Ibitayo was not only my children’s principal and teacher [as well as my employer] but she also helped raise both me AND my children. Although, I have to admit I was the hardest student of us all thus I am still learning. I might be by far her greatest challenge. She is like a mother to me… a best friend… a confidant… an advisor… she is as much, if not more, responsible for my children’s greatness as their father and I am. Now that is something for you to ponder while beginning your travels off the grid...
Be Strong… Stay Strong… Live Strong… Love Strong… Asuecion
To find out more about enrolling your child, volunteering or making a donation, please visit or call:
Africa-Care Academy
724 W. 10th Street
Dallas, Texas 75208
214-941-1511
Africa-Care Academy is a 501©3 Organization
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