A Hackathon between Police and Youth of Color? The Time is Now.

This weekend (February 17- 19, 2017), Qeyno Labs launches the first 
UbuntuHack <http://ubuntuhack.eventbrite.com/> — a hackathon between 
communities in conflict. As the newest member of Hackathon Academy, 
UbuntuHack in Oakland will take place at SPUR, MetWest High School, and the 
Oakland Museum of California and will focus on the relationship between 
youth of color and local police.

UbuntuHack will gather youth, members of the police community, and 
professionals who will be working alongside them to forge teams and produce 
solutions in the form of web and mobile app prototypes. Since the launch of 
the first hackathon for Black Male Achievement launched by Qeyno as the 
first Startup Weekend in Oakland, there hasn’t been a more controversial 
offering to the public. Since the announcement of UbuntuHack in the summer 
of 2016, we have faced critics from the activist community, resistance from 
organizations who also champion similar causes of introducing coding 
literacy to low opportunity youth, and have worked tirelessly to bring 
sworn police officers to participate just as much we do with recruiting 
youth and mentors.

Just as the Black Male Achievement Hackathon was considered controversial 
when it was announced in 2013, Qeyno embarked on a journey to make the 
impossible — possible. We created an experience that disrupted Silicon 
Valley by intersecting social justice with tech innovation, but it also 
served to inspire a generation of organizations around the world to take up 
the mantle of advancing “inclusive innovation” for their local communities.

The Origins of UbuntuHack

It began with the Mike Brown tragedy in Ferguson, Missouri. Long held 
tensions between communities of color and local police erupted across the 
country as protestors rallied and police forces were mobilized. Van Jones, 
CNN Contributor reached out to our Headmaster CEO, Kalimah Priforce, on the 
idea of bringing Hackathon Academy to the youth of Ferguson in hopes or 
creating opportunities and seed hope into their lives in the midst of 
social despair and economic disenfranchisement. The work of Qeyno is guided 
by our founding concept of “empathy spillover”. It’s why we create an 
experience with each Hackathon Academy geared towards diversity and 
fostering meaningful connection.

Priforce shared with Jones, “The images I am seeing on television, and from 
the reports I’ve come across about social conditions for Blacks in 
Ferguson, I am reminded of Apartheid, South Africa where low opportunity 
caused by marginalization is normalized. If policing is the problem, then 
the police have to be involved. Everyone needs to be brought together.” 
Priforce followed up his proposal for a hackathon based on reconciliation 
and innovation with multiple visits to Ferguson, Missouri.

Priforce met with parents, and youth, and activists. The greatest 
resistance to the idea of police and youth coming together came from 
activists who threatened to “molotov cocktail” any reconciliatory event and 
preferred forums that were controlled by them and hostile towards police 
presence. After numerous attempts to find common ground, the launch of 
UbuntuHack was postponed as news of scandals among Oakland’s own police 
force began to surface. Rather than addressing community-to-police 
relations in other communities, we decided to take care of home first and 
UbuntuHack as a model of what is possible.

UbuntuHack is a New Narrative for the “Next America”

The world’s first UbuntuHack has been met with resistance at home, but we 
continued to continue to reach out to communities, to connect with sponsors 
to provide resources from laptops to nutritious meals, enroll youth to 
become our Trailblazers, recruit mentors to become our Senior Developers, 
Designers, and Innovators to their junior counterparts. Certainly we have 
worked with local police forces to inspire them to “show up” and provide 
their narratives in an environment that will be a level playing field for 
all.

Conflicts between communities of color and police will continue to persist 
around the country, especially under our current political environment. 
News reports will flood our social networks, there will be an increase in 
riots and protests and police officers will continue to be mobilized with 
armed resistance to suppress public reactions to social injustice. There 
will be more stories of rogue officers slaying unarmed civilians and 
violent civilians killing police officers and our current private and 
public leadership will fail to provide a reconciliatory tone. We must be 
that leadership for the sake of our youth and the narratives they inherit.

As America continues to become increasingly diverse, we all have a 
responsibility to step out from those divisions, out of our comfort zones, 
and create new narratives to share about our potential as a country to move 
forward together, because their (our youth) potential is inextricably 
linked to the potential of our land, our nation.

A hackathon between police and youth is consider far too ambitious, but we 
are doing it anyway. UbuntuHack may be way ahead of its time, but the time 
has come to challenge the status quo on all sides to recognize each other 
and address parallel dehumanization and we need your help to make history 
once again.

Register to be a mentor or volunteer at UbuntuHack.com 
<http://ubuntuhack.eventbrite.com/> or ubuntuhack.eventbrite.com. For any 
questions of inquiries please reach the Team Qeyno at [email protected] and/or 
via Slack at http://bit.ly/qeynopublic.

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