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How one 鈥榥eighborhood hero鈥 is nourishing Buffalo after the shooting

For Dakarai Singletary, being a hero means meeting the needs of his Buffalo, New York, community. This week, that involved responding to the aftermath of a mass shooting.聽

By Ken Makin, Contributor

When 13 people were shot (10 fatally) at a Buffalo, New York, Tops Friendly Markets store last weekend, Dakarai Singletary did what came naturally to him 鈥 the work of a hero.

As the founder and president of Candles in the S.U.N., a nonprofit based in Buffalo, Mr. Singletary and his team sprang into action. The group quickly organized the distribution of free fresh produce and supplies donated by local farms and another market. His goal? To 鈥渓imit further trauma of returning to the location,鈥 he says.

鈥淏uffalo is a 鈥榤y cousin鈥 type of city,鈥 Mr. Singletary explains. 鈥淓verybody knows each other, so when [something like this] happens here, it hits a little bit harder.鈥

Standing in the gap for his community is nothing new for Mr. Singletary. At the height of the pandemic, the organization distributed thousands of pieces of personal protective equipment to people in need. And the group regularly conducts development camps and donation drives.

Mr. Singletary spoke with the Monitor recently about the organization鈥檚 current efforts and Buffalo鈥檚 reemergence from an unspeakable tragedy. The interview has been edited for length and clarity.

Where were you when you first heard about the shooting?

Actually, I was at home asleep. Every Saturday, we do a free youth basketball clinic from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., and then we play baseball from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. 鈥 [Afterward] I fell asleep. When I awoke, I saw that my brother had called me 15 times. 鈥 And a few of my contacts within the organization [had been] calling. 鈥 [Then] my lawyer鈥檚 wife called and she was like, 鈥淗ey, are you home? Are you OK?鈥 She said there was a 鈥渞acist mass shooter over on Jefferson.鈥 鈥 I heard her, but I didn鈥檛 really process it. Then I got on Twitter, and that鈥檚 when I really started seeing what was going on.

I consider myself a neighborhood hero, so I put out a memo which said if you were in contact with the families or knew anyone affected, put me in contact with them immediately. People in my network started doing exactly that.

When you say 鈥渘eighborhood hero,鈥 what does that mean?

I never refer to people as 鈥渧olunteers.鈥 They鈥檙e always 鈥渘eighborhood heroes,鈥 because what you do for us is beyond a two-to-three- or a two-to-four-hour frame. When these kids see you out in the neighborhood, they鈥檙e excited. They鈥檙e ecstatic, actually, because you鈥檙e a neighborhood hero. So you have to take pride in that. It鈥檚 not you being perfect 鈥 it鈥檚 just being a better version of yourself, working every day to improve and make your neighborhood better. Because when you鈥檙e a better you, you make your neighborhood better.

Why did you choose this particular response in terms of free food?

[Tops is] the only grocery store accessible to 50 neighborhoods east of Main Street, which is where 87% of Black residents live in Buffalo. So that one store being closed is an issue for our community. 鈥

You don鈥檛 just go to the grocery store for groceries. You go for baby formula, you go for Pampers, you go for everything. That鈥檚 what we鈥檙e doing. We鈥檙e providing all the baby supplies, because people are missing everything right now. Supplies are completely depleted, so we鈥檙e ensuring that people have everything accessible to them, with no hesitation or quantity limits.

What鈥檚 been the community response, in terms of the sense of morale juxtaposed with the actions of the shooter?

Honestly, I refuse to even give him any light. I鈥檓 a person that says, 鈥楬ow are we gonna prevent this from happening next time?鈥 I鈥檓 all about proactiveness. We can look back on 400-plus years of history, but we can also use our history to ensure that what鈥檚 happened to us doesn鈥檛 continue to happen to us.聽

We鈥檙e working on providing new food options for that neighborhood, and not just a one-time thing for one week, two weeks, three weeks, 鈥 not just when the news cameras are there, when it鈥檚 cool, when it looks good, but staying there consistently.

Talk about the level of commitment and investment it takes to be there perpetually.

People are always asking me, 鈥淲here do you work? What do you do?鈥 This is my job, 24/7, being a neighborhood hero. That鈥檚 not something where you just take your hat off at night. I get calls at 3, 4 a.m. from my kids [I work with] at the schools checking up on me, parents asking me for things.聽

It鈥檚 not even just me. There are other heroes that 鈥 have taken time off [fully or partially to help]. You have jobs that understand what we provide to the community that are giving their workers time off with respect to what we鈥檙e doing for our community.聽

What inspired the name Candles in the S.U.N.? [S.U.N. stands for Save Ur Neighborhood]

If you look at the logo, people are passing [each other holding candles]. People are helping one another to light their candles and to light one another鈥檚 candles. And that鈥檚 my whole thought with knowledge and information.聽

If I can pass my knowledge to you, help you light your candle, you pass it to somebody else. You light their candle, and we can light a neighborhood. You light up a neighborhood into a sun, and a sun is a very hot thing.聽

Our communities are seen as cold, 鈥 and we鈥檙e always trying to really change that. We aren鈥檛 what we鈥檝e been painted out to be 鈥 we are far from it. I don鈥檛 care how others view us. We need to change how we view ourselves. So that鈥檚 what I鈥檓 really here to do.