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Craft Around the Country

In Alabama, A Newly Announced Folk School for the Global Majority

Ashby Combahee and Jada G. Patterson are currently fundraising and planning programming for Olamina Folk School for Land, Memory, and Craft in Tuskegee.

By Robert Alan Grand
June 29, 2026

 

Photo courtesy of Morgan Slucher

Jada G. Patterson weaving a sweetgrass basket. Patterson, one of the founders of Olamina Folk School, is a multimedia artist whose work often incorporates textiles and fiber.

Rooted in the Danish folkehøjskole model and Southern Black folk traditions, the idea for the newly announced Olamina Folk School for Land, Memory, and Craft in Tuskegee, Alabama, emerged from Ashby Combahee and Jada G. Patterson’s complex experiences at Appalachian folk schools. 

Combahee, a memory worker and musician who works as the librarian and archivist at Highlander Research and Education Center in Tennessee, wanted to bring the Nordic model’s emphasis on lifelong, liberatory learning to more people beyond the Center’s social justice purview. Multidisciplinary artist and craftsperson Patterson “feels the magic” when taking classes at rural folk and craft schools but acknowledges that the institutions themselves can be overwhelmingly white and isolating. 

“When I talk to my family and friends,” Patterson says, “we have a history of blacksmiths, woodworkers, and beekeepers deep in our ancestry—and it’s not often represented when you go to these spaces.”

Olamina—named after the main character in Octavia Butler’s 1993 sci-fi novel Parable of the Sower—seeks to create a transformative space for craftspeople, farmers, and workers of color to connect, learn, and build a better future for their communities.

Photo courtesy of Tuskegee University Archives

A student in tapestry class at what is now Tuskegee University, circa 1920.

The co-founders are currently in the initial stages of fundraising, working to accrue $100,000 towards start-up costs. But, Patterson says, “just because we don’t have a school yet, doesn’t mean we can’t start holding workshops and other programming.”

The two are currently working with Josie Gbadamosi, owner of Tuskegee’s Shady Grove Road Blueberry Patch, to schedule workshops on her berry farm that combine land work, memory work, and craft. Combahee also hosts a monthly virtual community of practice gathering with the African American Craft Alliance to foster connections among BIPOC craftspeople.

Even before breaking ground, the response from Combahee and Patterson’s networks has been overwhelmingly positive. Staff members at other craft schools have offered guidance and support, and, Combahee says, “Black and brown artists have been like, ‘Yes, this is the space I’ve been hoping for, dreaming of, wanting.’ It’s so encouraging to hear that, and it shows that we’re moving in the right direction.”

“At first it was scary,” Patterson says, “but I’m not scared anymore. We’re ready to make it happen.”

Photo courtesy of Jada Patterson

Ashby Combahee and Jada Patterson with Josie Gbadamosi and Larry El Amin of the Shady Grove Blueberry Patch, a farm in Tuskegee, Alabama, that will host workshops as a part of Olamina Folk School.

Robert Alan Grand is a writer and photographer based in Asheville, North Carolina. He received the 2025 Andy Warhol Foundation Arts Writers Grant to cover contemporary art in southern and central Appalachia.

Learn more about Olamina Folk School online.

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This article was made possible with support from the Windgate Foundation.

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