Artie Mack found Andrew Foster on the internet.
He learned his story. A Black man born in Alabama in 1925, who went deaf when he was 11 after a bout of spinal meningitis and became the first African American to receive a bachelor's degree from Gallaudet University.
A man inspired by this Bible verse: In that day, the deaf will hear the words of the book …
A man who traveled to Ghana in 1957 and eventually opened schools for the deaf in 13 African nations.
Mack wrote Foster’s life story down.
And the Lincoln artist made him come alive in a drawing, too. In a pencil-and-ink outline, Foster appeared in African dress and a small hat, sitting with his hands lightly clasped, smiling.
Mack drew the image from a photograph, adding his own embellishments. He drew it for a coloring book called Black Lives, Black Futures.
People are also reading…
The idea for the book started in the South of Downtown Community Development Organization on 11th Street. Kat Wiese works there. Derick Gaspard runs his vegan restaurant Juju’s from a side room.
Last year, the two of them had helped launch an art show for Black History Month, showcasing local African American artists, painters, photographers, musicians.
“It was so much fun,” Wiese said. “We started thinking, ‘What can we do during the pandemic that is delightful and celebrates Black history and is still safe?’”
They called Letura Idigima, who launched Art Bus LNK early last year.
The three of them thought about art and their connections to artists in the neighborhood. One of those artists, Dwight Brown, had created Mount Blackmore, with the faces of Frederick Douglass, Harriet Tubman, MLK and Malcolm X, instead of former presidents.
Wiese had the print hanging in her studio. What about creating a coloring book?
A coloring book they could give away to school children and neighbors. A coloring book people could download for free and share with their kids, or color and learn for themselves.
“We wanted to capture some of the tradition and history that exists in our own city,” Wiese said. “The things people have accomplished is pretty amazing.”
The trio started calling Black artists in town. Idigima contacted students she had connected with through her art classes. The drawings began arriving. Malcolm X. James Terry, a Lincoln music organizer; Mamie Griffin, who was immortalized in a 1920s photograph by Black photographer John Johnson of Lincoln. The history-making faces of Mount Blackmore.
And a little-known Black man named Andrew Foster.
Mack, the artist who drew him and researched his life, works part time for Gaspard at Juju’s — and full time as a baker for the Coffee House downtown. He grew up in Lincoln and graduated from UNL in 2013. He had a minor in art and ethnic studies, but he’s a self-taught artist for the most part.
He’s also deaf.
During the Black Lives Matters protests last summer, the 31-year-old designed a T-shirt using American Sign Language to spell out those three words. The shirts raised $6,000 for the Black Leaders Movement.
He’s passionate about raising awareness of the contributions from the Black deaf community and their erasure from the historical record as activists.
So when Gaspard told him about the project and asked if he’d like to participate, he knew he wanted to shine a light on one of those difference-makers.
He started to dig. He found out that Foster had moved to Detroit to attend the Michigan School for the Deaf, took night classes to earn a diploma from the Detroit Institute of Commerce, worked and graduated from high school at 26, graduated from Gallaudet and later earned two master’s degrees, one in education and one in Christian Mission.
“I really loved that he traveled all over the world and went to Africa, which is like the homeland and paved the way for deaf Africans to come to the United States and study,” Mack said. “I also loved that as an educator he realized there was not one special method to teaching, whether sign language or talking or a combination of that, whatever is best for a person to learn you embrace that.”
Foster spent his life teaching deaf children, building 23 schools for them in Africa — and raising money to make those schools happen.
He died in a plane crash in Rwanda in 1987, Mack wrote. He was married and had five children.
Mack also wrote of the discrimination Foster faced and the hills he climbed.
“I chose to honor Andrew Foster because his Black deaf American experience and activism took him all the way to the motherland in Africa,” he wrote. “He became a bridge between deaf and hearing cultures, between Black deaf people and sign language, and reminds us to always be fighting for all Black lives across the globe through an intersectional lens.”
Only a line or two of that history will appear in the coloring book. But it’s out there for people to learn about, if they look.
Mack started a TikTok channel at the end of January — @Theartiemack has grown from 500 to 10,000 followers.
He shared a TikTok to kick off Black History Month. It got more than 55,000 views.
He signed. And he spoke. And he flashed a drawing of a Black man that would soon make its way into a coloring book.
OK, so this is Andrew Foster. Here’s a picture that I drew of him. He was born in Alabama in 1925 ...
Five Cindy Lange-Kubick columns from an upside-down year
Columns from an upside-down year: Soups and scones
This story is about nostalgia -- so many of us, packed so close together in the pursuit of good soup and scones. It gives me hope that those days will return.
Columns from an upside-down year: Remembering Chuck E. Cheese
Sometimes it's the little things that put a lump in your throat, like not knowing that the last time you took your sweet grandson to the germ-infested arcade parlor he loved would be the last time.
Columns from an upside-down year: Dying alone
So much pain during the pandemic, but none worse than the grief of families and health care workers as so many die alone in the hospital.
Columns from an upside-down year: An ugly baby?
Who doesn't love an ugly baby story?
Columns from an upside-down year: The Angel in Room 255
A story about hope and goodness and friendship at a time when people needed to hear about the angels of this world.