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Stories about Black and African American Community

AFSP Vice President for Health Equity and Engagement Victor Armstrong (left) convened a panel of speakers at St. Augustine’s University in Raleigh, NC, on February 20. Picture from left, the panel included St. Augustine’s Senior and Mister Saint Augustine's University Louis Keenan Lowndes, UNC Charlotte Assistant Professor School of Social Work Dr. Sonyia Richardson, and AFSP-NC Board Chair and Chapter Leadership Council Member Keon Lewis.

L.E.T.S Save Lives: A Message of Hope and Perseverance for the Black Community

What makes L.E.T.S. Save Lives such a vital program is that it helps to foster new conversations about mental health and suicide prevention for the Black community. This program has been created by and for Black people and resonates in a unique way with its audience.

Photo of Victor Armstrong wearing a suit and smiling at the camera

Suicide Does Not Discriminate: Normalizing the Conversation Around Suicide in the Black and African American Community

L.E.T.S. Save Lives is an effort to help normalize the conversation regarding suicide in the Black and African American community. It is a reminder that the danger of losing hope and social connection is not exclusive to any one race or culture, and neither is the opportunity to create pathways to restore hope.

Courtney B. Vance

How to Lose (On Death and Dying)

In the new book The Invisible Ache: Black Men Identifying Their Pain and Reclaiming Their Power by Courtney B. Vance and Dr. Robin L. Smith, famed actor Courtney B. Vance shares his heartfelt, personal journey in the wake of his father’s death by suicide.