International Knit in Public Day

International Knit in Public Day is celebrated on the second Saturday of June every year. The objective of the holiday is to showcase knitting as an enjoyable activity to partake in — for all ages, not just doting grandparents looking to make a sweater for their grandchildren. The day brings with it a sense of community for knitters, who often celebrate together by knitting in public spaces to make their hobby more visible and accessible to the public. Worldwide Knit in Public Day was founded in 2005 by Danielle Landes and remains the world’s largest knitting event

In Calgary, Knit in Public day will be celebrated on Saturday June 13 from 10am-2pm on June 13th at Bowness Park. The event is sponsored by Stash. Ujamaa Grandmas have taken part for a few years to advertise our presence in Calgary and educate the public on what we do. We provide door prizes and enter the knitting/crochet races. It’s a lot of fun.

Please feel free to join us and bring your project, a lunch and clothing for whatever June may have in store for us. We will not be difficult to find as we have the Ujamaa sign. Hope to see you there.

AFRO KITCHEN Lunch

WHAT: Lunch at AFRO KITCHEN

WHEN: Thurs. June 11, 11:30 AM

WHERE: AFRO KITCHEN NL, Unit 4 1704 62 St.SE

Come join us for a lunch with fellow Ujamaa Grandmas members.  We will be talking to the chef to pick out several interesting, representative, popular African dishes.  We could then share the cost & be able to try several different dishes. If you prefer you could order your own choices from the menu.

I appreciate this isn’t, giving you a lot of notice but I hope you will be able to join us for a taste of Africa.  Please reply to message@ujamaagrandmas.com  as soon as possible.

Thanks, Marilyn

Join our ‘Stride to Turn the Tide’ Team 2026


For the month of June, Ujamaa Grandmas (UG) members will have yet another fun way to fundraise for the Stephen Lewis Foundation. SLF funds over 1800+ African community initiatives focused on health, education, and strengthening the capacity of African grandmothers to support their families – and we can help SLF. ANY type of activity is counted – not only walking or running, but any others you enjoy – crafts, gardening, cooking, reading, biking, golfing and so on. Each team member keeps track of the time they spend on any activity. Each hour of activity is worth 5 km. For fundraising, we ask family and friends to make a pledge to support us. Do not be shy to do this and to include those who don’t live in Calgary – this is similar to asking them to attend any of our other successful fundraising events,

To sign up send an email to message@ujamaagrandmas.com ATTN: Stride.

If you have further questions please contact Jan Geggie at message@ujamaagrandmas.com

MIGHTY BE OUR POWERS

BOOK CLUB MAY 2026 Selection

Mighty Be Our Powers: How Sisterhood, Prayer, and Sex Changed a Nation at War by Leymah Gbowee, tells the story of how a group of women working together created an unstoppable force that brought peace to Liberia.

The author, together with Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf and women’s rights activist Tawakkul Karman of Yemen, received the Nobel Peace Prize in 2011. The book tells the story of how a group of women working together created an unstoppable force that brought peace to Liberia. 

Beyond the Door of No Return

BOOK CLUB April 2026 Selection

This month we will be discussing Beyond the Door of No Return by David Diop, translated from the French by Sam Taylor.

Diop has received numerous prizes for his work, including the Prix Goncourt in France and the International Booker Prize in the UK. Beyond the Door of No Return is the story of a French botanist in the latter half of the 18th century who travels to Senegal to study plants and finds himself overwhelmed by love for an African woman.

Long Walk to Freedom

BOOK CLUB February 2026 Selection

Nelson Mandela’s Long Walk to Freedom brilliantly re-creates the drama of the experiences that helped shape Nelson Mandela’s destiny. It is emotive, compelling, and uplifting– the exhilarating story of an epic life; a story of hardship. resilience and ultimate triumph told with the clarity and eloquence of a born leader.

The Missing American

BOOK CLUB October 2025 Selection

The Missing American by Kwei Quartey is a detective novel that takes place in Ghana and features a young woman detective.

The book was shortlisted for the Edgar Allen Poe First Novel award In 2020. We previously read Wife of the Gods by the same author and thoroughly enjoyed it.

Africa Book Club  meets every six weeks to discuss a book about Africa. We read both fiction and non-fiction, primarily books by modern African writers (although we have also read some classics and some books by people who spent time in Africa).

New members are always welcome. For more information, contact us at message@ujamaagrandmas.com

Americanah

BOOK CLUB August 2025 Selection

Americanah, winner of the National Book Critics Circle Award for Fiction, is written by Chimamanda Ngozi Adiche, a wonderful writer whose novel, Half of a Yellow Sun, we enjoyed a couple of years ago.

This is a modern classic about star-crossed lovers that explores questions of race and being Black in America—and the search for what it means to call a place home.

We are in the process of settling on an August date that works best for all, so please contact  message@ujamaagrandmas.com Attn: Africa Book Club if you are interested in attending or would like more information on the book club.

The Inheritors: An Intimate Portrait of South Africa’s Racial Reckoning

BOOK CLUB June 2025 Selection

The Inheritors: An Intimate Portrait of South Africa’s Racial Reckoning by Eve Fairbanks is a non-fiction book (we alternate fiction a non-fiction) and winner of the PEN/John Kenneth Galbraith Award for Nonfiction.

A dozen years in the making, The Inheritors weaves together the stories of three ordinary South Africans over five tumultuous decades in a sweeping and exquisite look at what really happens when a country resolves to end white supremacy.

We chose this book because our discussion last month of the classic novel, Cry the Beloved Country made us wonder what South Africa is like almost seventy years later.

Cry the Beloved Country

BOOK CLUB March 2025 Selection
Cry the Beloved Country by Alan Paton is a classic novel from South Africa.
This is an important novel in South Africa’s history, and was an immediate worldwide bestseller in 1948. Alan Paton’s impassioned novel about a black man’s country under white man’s law is a work of searing beauty.
The story  is  a tragedy about blacks and whites in  South Africa just before apartheid. It is beautifully written.

The Colour Bar

BOOK CLUB March 2025 Selection


The Color Bar by Susan Williams tells the fascinating story of Seretse Khama, born into a royal family in what was then Bechuanaland, a British protectorate. He attended university in the UK and fell in love with and married a British woman, but when the time came for them to return to Africa, the South African government pressured the British government to prevent him from returning to his home. It was only several years later that the couple were allowed to return. Khama eventually became Prime Minister and later President of what became the independent country of Botswana. 

Ghost Season

BOOK CLUB February 2025 Selection

Ghost Season by Fatin Abbas from Sudan, is a sweeping history of the breakup of Sudan and takes you to Saraaya, a fictional town rich with crude oil, located at the border of Sudan and South Sudan.

Abbas was born in Khartoum where she experienced the upheaval of the 1989 coup that forced her family to move to New York City. But, her ties to Sudan remained strong, and she drew from these experiences, particularly her time in the town of Abyei, in crafting the world of Saraaya, a place of quiet mystery and tension. into the lives of  five strangers in an NGO compound on the border between Sudan and South Sudan.

This novel  is a “gripping, vivid debut that announces Abbas as a powerful new voice in fiction”.

My Mother ‘s Back: A Journey from Kenya to Canada

BOOK CLUB January 2025 Selection

From My Mother’s Back: A Journey from Kenya to Canada by Djoki Wane is a memoir.
The author shares her journey from a Catholic girls’ boarding school in rural Kenya to standing in front of a lectern at the University of Toronto.  Along the way she reflects on the heritage that was taken from her as a child and the strengths and teachings of the family, particularly her mother,  that pulled her through and helped her to not only succeed as a scholar, but to reclaim her culture, her history and even her name.

The History of a Difficult Child

BOOK CLUB November 2024 Selection

The History of a Difficult Child by Mihret Sibhat is a novel about a young girl growing up during turbulent times in a small town in Ethiopia in the 1980s. The narrator is ten years old by the end of the story and  according to one reviewer, is “a magnificent guide to this ancient and enduring culture.” (New York Review of Books).

 

Our club welcomes new members. We meet approximately every six weeks and generally alternate between fiction and non-fiction books written about Africa, primarily although not exclusively by African authors.

For more information or to join us, write tomessage@ujamaagrandmas.com and we will  get back to you.

Born a Crime: Stories of a South African Childhood

BOOK CLUB October 2024 Selection

Born a Crime: Stories of a South African Childhood, by Trevor Noah is a memoir of growing up as a mixed-race person in South Africa.

Trevor was born to a white Swiss father and a black Xhosa mother at a time when such a union was punishable by five years in prison. Living proof of his parents’ indiscretion, Trevor was kept mostly indoors for the earliest years of his life, bound by the extreme and often absurd measures his mother took to hide him from a government that could, at any moment, steal him away. Finally liberated by the end of South Africa’s tyrannical white rule, Trevor and his mother set forth on a grand adventure, living openly and freely and embracing the opportunities won by a centuries-long struggle.This promises to be an enlightening read that is also very funny.

If you are interested in joining our book club, please contact message@ujamaagrandmas.com and we will get right back to you.

Quality of Mercy

BOOK CLUB August 2024 Selection
Quality of Mercy by Siphiwe Gloria Ndlovu is a mystery novel  in which a country’s first Black chief inspector investigates the disappearance of a powerful white man.
Quality of Mercy was designates as Best African Book of 2023, and is the conclusion to her multiple award-winning City of Kings trilogy.
We will return to a non-fiction selection in October. New members are always welcome. Contact us at message@ujamaagrandmas.com

Tea, Scones and Malaria

BOOK CLUB July  2024 Selection

This month our  book is Tea, Scones and Malaria by Katlynn Brooks.

This book is a phenomenal true account of one girl’s extraordinary upbringing in the rough and feral bushveld of 1950s and 60s Rhodesia. Moving from one makeshift camp to the next, the family follows Dad, a bridge builder for the government, deep into the heart of elephant and cheetah country.

“We ran barefoot in the bush, and swam in crocodile-infested rivers. We shared our camps with snakes, scorpions, and jerrymunglums. There was no electricity, no hospitals, and no schools in the bush. How I survived it all, I will never know.”

Hilarious, touching, raw, and deeply honest, this memoir records the journey from child to teenager to woman against the backdrop of a vanishing world, as Rhodesia begins its long and tumultuous transition into the independent country of Zimbabwe.

 This Child Will Be Great

BOOK CLUB April  2024 Selection

This month our  book is This Child Will Be Great, a memoir by Ellen Johnson Sirleaf. Sirleaf shares the story of her rise to power, including her early childhood; her experiences with abuse, imprisonment, and exile; and her fight for democracy and social justice. She reveals her determination to succeed in multiple worlds, from her studies in the United States to her work as an international bank executive, to campaigning in some of Liberia’s most desperate and war-torn villages and neighborhoods. It is the tale of an outspoken political and social reformer who fought the oppression of dictators and championed change. By telling her story, Sirleaf encourages women everywhere to pursue leadership roles at the highest levels of power, and gives us all hope that we can change the world.

Sirleaf became the first elected head of state of an African country (in this case, Liberia, in 2006) She  won the Nobel Peace Prize in 2011.