Halloween costume party brings out north Minneapolis families

Project Refocus, a nonprofit founded by KB Brown, threw its annual Halloween party at the Capri Theater.

The Minnesota Star Tribune
October 26, 2024 at 9:22PM
Justice Mapp, 4, Royalty Doyle, 5, and Bri Mapp, 6, came as Disney princesses Cinderella, Elsa and Elsa. (Susan Du/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Tired of hearing about north Minneapolis kids having to go to the suburbs to trick-or-treat, business owner KB Brown started throwing a costume bash at the Capri Theater with the goal of bringing together families and the organizations that care for them.

Now in its fourth year, that Halloween party has become a stone soup of community organizations cooking out, roller-skating and giving away tote bags of candy to tiny superheroes and princesses.

Elected officials, including state Rep. Esther Agbaje, DFL-Minneapolis, and Hennepin County Commissioner Jeff Lunde, dropped in on the festivities Saturday to get out the vote in the final stretch of door-knocking season. KMOJ’s Walter “Q Bear” Banks Jr. DJed the party.

KB Brown and his grandson Zakari, 3. Brown founded Project Refocus, a nonprofit that deals with youth mentorship, security along the West Broadway business corridor and opioid response in the surrounding neighborhoods. (Susan Du/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Farji Shaheer of Innovative SOULutions provided a bounce house and inflatable basketball hoops. A violence intervention professional who offers community training on treating traumatic bleeding, Shaheer recently bought land in Bemidji, Minn., to develop a retreat center for gun violence survivors.

He, in turn, invited Santella Williams and Dominque Howard to bring Pull and Pay, a former Metro Mobility bus retrofitted as a mobile arcade full of vintage games, such as NBA Jam and Big Buck Hunter. The bus was a pandemic epiphany for Williams and fiance Howard when they suddenly found themselves with four children and nowhere to take them after COVID-19 seemed to shut down everything. Pull and Pay now shows up to community events throughout the North Side.

Pull and Pay owner Dominique Howard showed kids, squeezed elbow to elbow, how to play Big Buck Hunter inside his homebuilt mobile arcade. (Susan Du/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

“This is the first time I’ve been able to come through, but we figured we’d stop by check it out. It’s so perfect, and such a beautiful day,” said Shannon Tekle, a Northside Economic Opportunity Network board member who attended with her 2-year daughter, both of them dressed as monarch butterflies.

“North Side, we’re a big family,” said Brown, proudly toting on his arm grandson Zakari — a 3-year-old with candy-smeared cheeks. “Everybody here is from the community.”

about the writer

about the writer

Susan Du

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Susan Du covers the city of Minneapolis for the Star Tribune.

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