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The Metro: InsideOut Literary Arts celebrates 30 years with a new move and new programs

21 October 2025 at 17:12

For almost 30 years now, InsideOut Literary Arts has helped countless Detroit students find a love and passion for creative writing.

InsideOut was founded by Dr. Terry Blackhawk, a Detroit Public Schools teacher, who had a goal to inspire young people through the written and spoken word. Since 1995, the organization has expanded, offering classroom instructions, free performances and career opportunities after participation.

Tia, Justin Rogers, Suma Karaman Rosen, Robyn Vincent
Left to right: Metro Host Tia Graham, InsideOut Citywide Poets Manager Justin Rogers, InsideOut Executive Director Suma Karaman Rosen, Metro Host Robyn Vincent
Hajjar Baban – Poet with a master’s in fine arts from University of Virgina. InsideOut Literary Arts Alum

This year, the organization made it a point to fill spaces throughout the city with youth poetry. They purchased 30 billboards, replacing ordinary ads with student writing. And as you drive through the Avenue of Fashion, you’ll see a new mural by artist Oshun Williams.

To cap the end of its 30th year, a party at The Norwood celebrates the joy and impact InsideOut Literary Arts over the past three decades.

Suma Karaman Rosen is Executive Director of InsideOut Literary Arts. Hajjar Baban is an InsideOut Alum and has a master’s in fine arts from University of Virginia. She is an award-winning poet and currently a poetry reader for Muzzle Magazine.

They joined The Metro’s Tia Graham to talk more about 30 years of poetry and more.

Listen to The Metro weekdays from 10 a.m. to noon ET on 101.9 FM and streaming on demand.

Subscribe to The Metro on Apple Podcasts, Spotify, NPR.org or wherever you get your podcasts.

Support local journalism.

WDET strives to cover what’s happening in your community. As a public media institution, we maintain our ability to explore the music and culture of our region through independent support from readers like you. If you value WDET as your source of news, music and conversation, please make a gift today.

More stories from The Metro

The post The Metro: InsideOut Literary Arts celebrates 30 years with a new move and new programs appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

‘Detroit to Gloryland’ takes local students back to Yosemite

30 September 2025 at 20:30

Detroit Outdoors has taken a group of students and teachers to Yosemite National Park for the second time.

The Detroit to Gloryland journey is designed to introduce youth to outdoor activities like camping and rock climbing and pick up on some history.

The group travels to Yosemite in late July so they are in there during National Buffalo Soldier Day, and within reach of the park system’s expert on the history of Buffalo Soldiers in the park.

Shelton Johnson is a native Detroiter, an alum of Cass Technical High School and a park ranger. He has worked to collect the narratives of the Black and other non-white soldiers who served as Yosemite’s first rangers and share their individual and collective stories.

Park ranger Shelton Johnson in the park
Park ranger Shelton Johnson helps guide the Gloryland students and teach them the park’s history.

WDET’s Sascha Raiyn got to travel with the students both years. You can hear stories from the first Detroit to Gloryland trip and learn more about Shelton Johnson in 2024 here.

‘Gloryland’ veterans speak

Three students pose on top of a mountain
Jaiden Nedd, Cameron Thomas and Arcia Quinn in Yosemite.

It was Cass Tech High School Junior Tiffany Orr’s first-time camping and first-time in Yosemite. She interviewed the three students who came on the trip for a second time: Jaiden Nedd, Cameron Thomas and Arcia Quinn.

Expressing Yosemite: a poet’s guide to being in nature

Poetry books on a picnic table at a campsite in the woods
Poet and author Jacqueline Suskind traveled to Yosemite with the students.

Listen: Expressing Yosemite: a poet’s guide to being in nature

Poet and author Jacqueline Suskind traveled with the students. Suskind’s work focuses on her relationship to nature – and on teaching others to explore their own relationships to nature — through writing.

Students had an inside guide to Yosemite this year

Listen: Students had an inside guide to Yosemite this year

Photographer Robel Fessehatzion poses with a student at Yosemite
Students learned some photography skills from professional Rodel Fessehatzion.

Robel Fessehatzion is a landscape photographer who works at and with Yosemite National Park.

He met the students who traveled from Detroit to Yosemite on the 2024 trip.

This year, Fessehatzion introduced the students to the people, places and history that shape his relationship to Yosemite.

He also gave them a little lesson in landscape photography.

A look at how Detroit Outdoors gets it done

Three carts overflowing with groceries at a big box store
Moving more than 20 people across the country to camp is a big undertaking.

Listen: A look at how Detroit Outdoors gets it done

Moving more than 20 people across the country to camp — many for the first time — is a big undertaking. We take a look at the logisitcs of the trip.

‘Gloryland’ first-timers speak

Two students sit at the top of a mountain in Yosemite
Pershing student Eva Effinger and Hamtramck High grad Nora Algahaim in Yosemite.

Sascha Raiyn gave her recorder to Pershing student Eva Effinger and Hamtramck High grad Nora Algahaim. They interviewed each other — on the one night the campers had very loud neighbors. They talked about their first camping experience and starting the trip not feeling so well.

To learn more and see photos of the experience, check out the Detroit Outdoors Instagram account. 

Students see the sights offered at Yosemite
'Detroit to Gloryland' offers young adults the chance to learn while out in a national park. Here they ask questions in front of a towering tree.
Yosemite 2025
The trip even allows hands-on learning in the arts, as they travel alongside photographers and poets.
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Support local journalism.

WDET strives to cover what’s happening in your community. As a public media institution, we maintain our ability to explore the music and culture of our region through independent support from readers like you. If you value WDET as your source of news, music and conversation, please make a gift today.

The post ‘Detroit to Gloryland’ takes local students back to Yosemite appeared first on WDET 101.9 FM.

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