“A lot of the work I do is, of course, community and digital organizing,” Ajamu says. “Informing people about what’s going on in the community, boosting and you know, crowdfunding, mutual aid for other folks and educating people”
Ajamu began Phreedom Jawn after the George Floyd protests began in Philadelphia.
He wanted to create a hub with reliable information; capturing what it looked like in Philadelphia during the George Floyd protests. The protests began May 20 and ended June 23 throughout the city. Protesters were teargassed, blocked on interstate highways, and confronted the National Guard.
The confrontations were frightening and some people were scared to leave their homes to vote in the state primary election.
The George Floyd protests were only the beginning. Ajamu began sharing helpful information:
- Lates COVID-19 facts
- Gun buybacks
- Citywide mutual aid efforts
- Information about hate crimes
- Safe activism preparation and more.
“Just making sure that everybody understands that the state isn’t going to take care of us,” Ajamu says. “So it’s kind of our job to make sure that we’re giving each other the resources and the information we need in order to survive.”
Ajamu says it’s not enough to give information once, so Phreedom Jawn works to create sustainable change.
“So it’s like after we do this crowdfunding, right, what else? What other steps are we going to take to make sure that you’re able to sustain, and you might need your rent paid for this month and last month, but we have to take it further, right?”
Phreedom Jawn is ten months into this mission and Ajamu says he is only getting started.