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Gambian Minnesotans seek a community center to connect to their African roots

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When Sainabou Jaye Marong moved to Minnesota in 2011, her family was quickly able to plug into the local Gambian community. They found plenty of people to connect with.

“People would hear about Minnesota and just come here,” she said.

Now the Gambian Association of Minnesota is hoping to buy a building to make into a central hub for the community’s cultural events, education, small business assistance and immigration support — a multipurpose center that can serve as a gathering point for Gambians in the state. It’s seeking a large space such as an old library with multiple rooms and a gathering area.

The association hopes to raise around $200,000 for a down payment, keeping monthly mortgage payments about the same as what it pays to rent space at the Islamic Educational and Cultural Center in north Minneapolis. The center ideally would be near Brooklyn Park in the northwest metro area, where there is a high concentration of Gambians — the vast majority of whom are Muslim — and other West African groups.

Jaye Marong’s husband grew up in Farafenni, a city in the north of Gambia — a small West African nation enveloped by Senegal that runs along the Gambia River to the Atlantic Ocean. Farafenni has around 25,000 residents, several of whom now live in Minnesota.

Buying a community center has been a goal for two decades, according to Nfamara Dampha, president of the Gambian Association. But the sizable down payment needed to purchase such a building has been a barrier, he said. The association recently started collecting monthly cash donations from members to make its dream a reality.

“Our priority is to, as a community, have a place to convene meetings — a place to bring the kids together, a place to interact and share resources,” Dampha said.

In the past decade, Jaye Marong said, she has seen the Gambian community grow in Minnesota, with people from all regions of the nation making their way here. The Gambian Association recently conducted a census and found just over 2,000 Gambians in the state.

Most Gambians in Minnesota are citizens of the United States, Dampha said. A big reason they want their own community center is to help the younger generations connect with their cultural roots as they become more integrated in American society.

“We want to see a broader future for our kids, and we also want them to identify with our community,” Jaye Marong said.

A cohesive community

Dampha became involved in the local Gambian community in 2015 when he came to the Twin Cities to work on his master’s and doctoral degrees at the University of Minnesota. Today he is a researcher at the U’s Institute on the Environment, and consults on climate adaptation projects for the World Bank.

He recently lent his scientific background to conducting a census of sorts on Gambians in Minnesota. The oldest immigrants have been here for 40 years, he said. Like other West African diasporas in Minnesota, Gambians are most concentrated in the northwest metro area.

The Gambian Association worked with Brooklyn Park to establish a sister-city connection with The Gambia’s capital, Banjul, in 2022. But Gambians are increasingly spreading across Minnesota. They include academics, medical care providers and small business owners.

With early immigrants starting to age, the association is now beginning to help families plan and pay for burials, Dampha said. It provides obituaries for the deceased, and celebrates accomplishments like school graduations for the living.

The association also plays a key role in helping people new to the United States with the immigration process, connecting them to education and health care, and assisting people as they work to buy homes or start businesses.

The Gambian Association hosts several social events every year and frequently partners with other West African immigrant communities for celebrations. It threw a party on Feb. 18 to mark Gambia’s independence from the United Kingdom in 1965. This year it hosted a small business resource conference, and it plans to hold the 14th annual women’s banquet on May 28.

The association constantly raises money for development projects in Gambia, and is sending money home this month to fund Ramadan meals. When 17 Gambians died in an apartment building fire last year in New York City, home to a large Gambian community, the association contributed relief funding.

“It’s a very cohesive community,” Jaye Marong said.

With second- and third-generation Gambian Americans growing up, Gambian Association members are trying to walk the balance between participating in American life and grounding young people in traditions from home. They believe that having their own building will help them realize the goal of establishing those roots.

“It’s about heritage, but it’s about integration and understanding a multicultural society and how it functions,” Dampha said.



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Star Tribune

Lynx lose WNBA Finals Game 3 against New York Liberty: Social media reacts

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The Lynx are in the hot seat.

The team lost Game 3 of the WNBA Finals series against the New York Liberty on Wednesday night 77-80, setting the stage for a decisive match at Target Center on Friday night. Fans in the arena reacted with resounding disappointment after Sabrina Ionescu sunk a three-pointer to break away from the tie game and dashed the Lynx’s chance at forcing overtime.

Before we get to the reactions, first things first: The Lynx set an attendance record, filling Target Center with 19,521 spectators for the first time in franchise history. That’s nearly 500 more than when Caitlin Clark was in town with the Indiana Fever earlier this year.

Despite leading by double digits for much of the game, the Lynx began the fourth quarter with a one-point lead over the Liberty and struggled to stay more than two or three points ahead throughout.

The Liberty took the lead with minutes to go in the fourth quarter and folks were practically despondent.

Of course, there were people who were in it solely for the spectacle. Nothing more.

The Lynx took a commanding lead early in the first quarter and ended the first half in winning position, setting a particularly jovial mood among the fanbase to start the game.

Inside Target Center, arena announcers spent a few minutes before the game harassing Lynx fans — and Liberty fans — who had not yet donned the complementary T-shirts draped over every seat.



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Bong Bridge will get upgrades before Blatnik reroutes

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DULUTH – The Minnesota and Wisconsin transportation departments will make upgrades to the Richard I. Bong Memorial Bridge in the summer of 2025, in preparation for the structure to become the premiere route between this city and Superior during reconstruction of the Blatnik Bridge.

Built in 1961, the Blatnik Bridge carries 33,000 vehicles per day along Interstate 535 and Hwy. 53. It will be entirely rebuilt, starting in 2027, with the help of $1 billion in federal funding announced earlier this year. MnDOT and WisDOT are splitting the remaining costs of the project, about $4 million each.

According to MnDOT, projects on the Bong Bridge will include spot painting, concrete surface repairs to the bridge abutments, concrete sealer on the deck, replacing rubber strip seal membranes on the main span’s joints and replacing light poles on the bridge and its points of entry. It’s expected to take two months, transportation officials said during a recent meeting at the Superior Public Library.

During this time there will be occasional lane closures, detours at the off-ramps, and for about three weeks the sidewalk path alongside the bridge will be closed.

The Bong Bridge, which crosses the St. Louis River, opened to traffic in 1985 and is the lesser-used of the two bridges. Officials said they want to keep maintenance to a minimum on the span during the Blatnik project, which is expected to take four years.



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Red Wing Pickleball fans celebrate opening permanent courts

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Red Wing will celebrate the grand opening of its first permanent set of pickleball courts next week with an “inaugural play” on the six courts at Colvill Park on the banks of the Mississippi, between a couple of marinas and next to the aquatic center.

Among the first to get to play on the new courts will be David Anderson, who brought pickleball to the local YMCA in 2008, before the nationwide pickleball craze took hold, and Denny Yecke, at 92 the oldest pickleball player in Red Wing.

The inaugural play begins at 11 a.m. Tuesday, with a rain date of the next day. Afterward will be food and celebration at the Colvill Park Courtyard building.

Tim Sletten, the city’s former police chief, discovered America’s fastest-growing sport a decade ago after he retired. With fellow members of the Red Wing Pickleball Group, he’d play indoors at the local YMCA or outdoors at a local school, on courts made for other sports. But they didn’t have a permanent place, so they approached the city about building one.

When a city feasibility study came up with a high cost, about $350,000, Sletten’s group got together to raise money.

The courts are even opening ahead of schedule, originally set for 2025.



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