December 6, 2025 5:22 pm

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Nubian Jam 2025: Celebrating fellowship and community connectedness

EVERETT—Thousands of people gathered throughout the day at Forest Park in Everett for the 33rd annual Nubian Jam hosted by the Snohomish County Black Heritage Committee (SCBHC) on Saturday, July 26, 2025, to celebrate African and African American culture.

Nubian Jam 2025
Olympia Edwards, CEO of Project Girl Mentoring Program, and Wil Johnson, Snohomish County’s Chief Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Officer who is reading a proclamation on behalf of Snohomish County Executive Dave Somers at Nubian Jam 2025. Lynnwood Times | Mario Lotmore.

“This is a time of fellowship, a time for connecting and a time for family; it’s a time to show love and peace and have joy,” DanVonique Bletson-Reed, President, Snohomish County Black Heritage Committee told the Lynnwood Times. “It [the event] is getting better and better every year. We are so grateful, and it seems like the word is catching on more and more.”

DanVonique shared that the event’s goal is to be both an educational as well as an entertaining experience through honoring Black elders and empowering positive self-awareness in Black youth. 

The first Nubian Jam took place on the 4th of July weekend of 1993 and was officially accepted by the City of Everett Centennial Events. According to the SCBHC’s historian Marilyn Quincy, in 1993, a group of friends who had not seen each other in ​a long time reunited at a funeral for another friend. After the memorial, the friends all agreed they should plan… a time where they could reminisce and share memories about their childhood. It was at that time when these individuals decided that only coming together when someone was ill or had passed away was no longer acceptable. 

Nubian Jam 2025
Scene from Nubian Jam 2025. Lynnwood Times | Mario Lotmore.

The Nubian Jam adopted its name after one of the young people, who served on the committee, shared that Nubian meant “Beautiful People” the SCBHC states on its website. The name Nubia is derived from the Noba people: nomads who settled the area in fourth-century AD following the collapse of the kingdom of Meroë.  In America, the name Nubia has come to be virtually synonymous with blackness and Africa. To ethnographers and linguists, it refers to a specific region straddling southern Egypt and northern Sudan, where black-skinned Nubians have traditionally lived.

Some of the original members for the Nubian Jam included Cynthia Andrews, Debra Ponds-Smith, Maxine Ponds, Vanessa Ponds, Marie Clay, Joe Holliman, Anthony Greenridge, Ron Gibson, Ella Anderson, Peggy Taylor, Clara Lumpkin and Ms. Marilyn Quincy.

Since its inception in 1993, the NUBIAN JAM has grown to be a daylong celebration featuring artists and performers, cultural exhibits, and vendors. Saturday’s event would not have been possible without the commitment from at least thirty partners and sponsors.

Nubian Jam 2025
Scene from Nubian Jam 2025. Lynnwood Times | Mario Lotmore.

Nubian Jam 2025 had youth activities by Project Girl, a 3-on-3 Basketball Tournament, an African attire fashion show, and African drumming with Pa Ousman Joff of the Washington West African Center who is hosting a Sounds of Africa Festival on August 16 at Garfield Park in Everett.

Other entertainment included a special performance by R&B vocal group H-Town, gospel hour, jazz, an open mic contest, HipHop and Reggae dancing to name a few.

The Buffalo Soldiers of Seattle, a non-profit committed to preserving the legacy of the first Black military regiments, stole the show. Dressed in full military garb of the early 19th century, members interacted with attendees and shared the contributions of Black infantry men and women, omitted from the history books, who helped settle and shape the West. The Buffalo Soldiers of Seattle were recently featured on PBS in June where you can still watch their story online.

Nubian Jam
MaryAnn Darby, Executive Committee member for the Snohomish County Black Heritage Committee (center-left) joined by members of the Buffalo Soldiers of Seattle (L-R: Geordan Newbill, Ebony Horne, and Vincent Redmond) at the 31st annual Nubian Jam hosted by the Snohomish County Black Heritage Committee (SCBHC) on Saturday, July 29, 2023. Lynnwood Times | Mario Lotmore.

Georgia Payne, a member of the Snohomish County Black Heritage Committee, showcased a Black history timeline, artwork, and a quilt depicting symbols of the Underground Railroad enslaved Africans used to escape from the South.

Nubian Jam 2025
Snohomish County Black Heritage Committee booth at Nubian Jam 2025. Lynnwood Times | Mario Lotmore.

“All those years of slavery, then Jim Crow, and then finally the Civil Rights era; so, to me this answers the question of why don’t you just get over it,” Payne told the Lynnwood Times after walking through a 400-year timeline of African American slavery displayed on the walls of the booth. “When the slaves were set free, there were so many roadblocks that were put up to keep you from advancing and helping yourself and pulling you up from your bootstraps…not that it didn’t happen, it did…but for the vast majority it did not until civil rights. So now that we are in today’s time, people want to reverse things thinking it is not needed anymore; yes, it is because historically we are still struggling with those things.”

Mario Lotmore
Author: Mario Lotmore

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