Tag Archives: VOICES

Coffee + Creativity = HAS HEART: Local veteran Michael Hyacinthe facilitates veteran healing through HAS HEART nonprofit

Located in Veterans Memorial Park, the small veteran-owned café is doing big things (Courtesy, HAS HEART)


By Deborah Reed

WKTV Managing Editor

deborah@wktv.org


Coffee lovers might miss the HAS HEART Coffee Shop if they are not looking closely.

Located in Veterans Memorial Park and occupying the historic building that originally served as the offices for the West Michigan Tourist & Resort Association and later used as annex offices for the Grand Rapids Children’s Museum, the small veteran-owned café is doing big things.

The HAS HEART Coffee Shop is located in Veterans Memorial Park (Courtesy, HAS HEART)

HAS HEART is a nonprofit veteran-and-designer collaboration that represents hundreds of veterans’ stories and messages through meaningful design creations. The inviting atmosphere is created by a blend of coffee and a mission to give back to those who served our country.

In fact, it was over coffee that Michael Hyacinthe, an 8-year U.S. Navy veteran, and Tyler Way, an artist/designer, met and realized the need to connect their two worlds.

HAS HEART founders Michael Hyacinthe (left) and Tyler Way (Courtesy, HAS HEART)

Finding purpose amidst tragedy

Originally from the Bronx in New York, Hyacinthe served as a U.S. Navy Seabee combat specialist after he graduated high school. Like many veterans, however, Hyacinthe found himself adrift after returning home from military service.

After driving a cab in New York City for two years, Hyacinthe moved to West Michigan where he married and began a family. During that time, a military serviceman Hyacinthe knew was deployed and killed in combat.

Reeling emotionally, Hyacinthe decided to honor all veterans killed in service – and chose Grand Rapids to lay the groundwork.

 “This was around the time ArtPrize was really becoming a big thing in Grand Rapids, and I saw how the city came together through art,” said Hyacinthe. “So I came here.”

Power in creativity

“Total Sacrifice” t-shirt designed by a U.S. Marine and Tyler Way (Courtesy, HAS HEART)

In 2011, Hyacinthe met a wounded U.S. Marine at a local veterans event. The Marine was paralyzed from the neck down and unable to speak due to injuries sustained in Iraq. However, he was able to share his story with Hyacinthe through an alphanumeric communication code translated on a clipboard by his full-time nurse.

Upon learning of the Marine’s passion for graphic t-shirts, Hyachinthe put plans in motion that would allow the young veteran to design his own.

“Recognizing the power in providing this wounded Marine the opportunity to design, we created a t-shirt for him called ‘Total Sacrifice,’” said Hyacinthe. “He designed it by using a very unique alphanumeric code where he had to blink. A certain number of blinks represented a certain letter, and that’s how we were able to design his t-shirt called ‘Total Sacrifice.’”

Hyacinthe and Way began designing t-shirts and donating the proceeds to various veteran organizations. By 2012, however, they had shifted their focus to center more on the veterans.

“We said, let’s pivot away from designing t-shirts ourselves and empower these veterans who have been wounded to design,” said Hyacinthe. “That’s when we decided to connect them with creative designers.”

More and more veterans began expressing their desire to create t-shirt designs. It was then that Hyacinthe and Way knew they needed to empower veterans across the U.S. to utilize the power of creativity to heal. That realization inspired them to create HAS HEART.

U.S. Navy Veteran Darrel Charles works with Miami-based graphic designer Brittany Ballinger to create the design “L’Union” (Courtesy, HAS HEART)

“Many of these veterans are disabled and can’t write,” said Hyacinthe. “These designers have the education and the experience of being professional designers, but many of them don’t know the military world because rarely are many of us connected.”

The HAS HEART Coffee Shop officially opened its doors in Veterans Memorial Park on Nov. 11, 2023 – Veterans Day.

Originally, the historical building housing HAS HEART was used solely for showcasing veterans’ art. But then…coffee.

“We decided to open up HAS HEART Coffee Shop where you can come and get a cup of coffee,” said Hyacinthe. “Veterans get a free cup of coffee. Then [patrons] can experience the designs created by the veterans.”

Approximately 30-40 veterans visit the HAS HEART Coffee Shop daily.

An outlet for healing and rebuilding

Hyacinthe dreams of HAS HEART one day becoming a retail space with all merchandise created by American veterans.

“Our goal is to one day open up a full retail store where people can come in and purchase products that were created by heroes who sacrificed,” said Hyacinthe. “Many of us come back home and we want to pursue the American dream of wealth and success, so we want to provide them that outlet.”

2024 ArtPrize public vote-winning entry, “Dynamic Sunset,” by Purple Heart veteran John Katerberg (Courtesy, HAS HEART)

The military, Hyacinthe said, completely strips you of your individuality. “You are now part of something bigger than yourself, and you need to recognize that you are not the most important piece of this thing.”

However, Hyacinthe continued, when someone leaves the military, regaining that sense of individuality is vital.

“It’s what allows you to survive in the world where you need to be an individual, because no one is telling you what to do,” said Hyacinthe.

That disconnect, coupled with trauma experienced through combat, PTSD, and physical and mental injuries, makes it difficult for veterans to re-acclimate to civilian life.

Hyacinthe believes creativity is a path of healing for many veterans because it gives them the ability to be heard.

Designer Chuck Anderson (left) helped U.S. Air Force Veteran Israel Del Toro (D.T.) design “Thru the Fire” (Courtesy, HAS HEART and Terry Johnston)

“To be heard, and to get what’s in your mind out into something visual so that you can see it, you can finally control it,” said Hyacinthe. “It’s the expression that this is real.”

As a veteran battling PTSD, Hyacinthe calls HAS HEART’s mission his therapy.

“There’s something really unique about veterans,” said Hyacinthe. “We tend to want to serve. If you give us a platform where we can continue to serve, they will find a medium to heal. And for me, this is continuing to serve through connecting veterans and giving them hope, giving them purpose through HAS HEART.”

Help empower veterans

Financial support is essential to the HAS HEART mission. Many veterans are flown into Grand Rapids to work with HAS HEART designers, and each HAS HEART veteran receives a stipend to accommodate their time.

“They’re not just all local, they’re from all over,” said Hyacinthe. “We’ve worked with hundreds of veterans.”

Raising awareness of HAS HEART’s mission, Hyacinthe went on to say, happens when people share their story online, purchase veteran-made products, make a donation, or come to the cafe and acknowledge and experience the storytelling being done.

Veterans and artists interested in participating in HAS HEART’s mission can contact Hyacinthe and Way here.

(Courtesy, HAS HEART)

Snapshots: Wyoming, Kentwood news you ought to know

By WKTV Staff

victoria@wktv.org

Quote of the Day

“Friendship … is born at the moment when one man says to another “What! You too? I thought that no one but myself . . .” 

~ C.S. Lewis, The Four Loves


The bet that really paid off

Grand Rapids Symphony

As children, neither musician was interested in studying stringed instruments, much less classical music. Baptiste, who wanted to study the saxophone, told NPR he ended up in the string section due to a bet between two teachers. The duo, who are Black Violin, are set to perform at the Grand Rapids Symphony’s Symphony with Soul Feb. 18 concert. Read more here.


Waiting by the window for the cats
and dogs to come raining down

Before Jimmy King was diagnosed with Asperger Syndrome (a developmental disorder on the Autism spectrum), his parents knew only that he was different from other kids. Read King’s story here.


And all that jazz…

Xavier Davis

Pianist Xavier Davis will be the featured artist during a concert Sunday, Feb. 10, at 3 p.m., at Fountain Street Church, 24 Fountain St. NE. Tickets are $15 general admission and $5 for students with ID, on-line or at the door. More info here.


Fun fact:

No kneecaps = no jumping.

Elephants are the only land mammals that cannot jump. Unlike all other mammals on earth (well, except for maybe whales and dolphins), elephants do not have kneecaps. Therefore, they are unable to bend their legs and acquire the needed propulsion to leave the ground.

Glue-in, souvlaki: Festival of the Arts is all about making memories

 

By Joanne Bailey-Boorsma

joanne@wktv.org

 

“My first experiences with Festival was going down and making a big sculpture that I was very proud of in the glue-in section,” said Festival of the Arts’ new interim director David Abbottt. “And I remember my parents carrying it back home in the back of a station wagon and the amount of glue that was in the back of that station wagon. (A little smile.) It is certainly a memory.”

 

It is those types of memories that Festival of the Arts and the WKTV VOICES hope to capture during a new partnership designed to help the arts organization celebrate its upcoming 50th anniversary. The VOICES vintage Airstream trailer, which is a a local and regional oral history project that collects, preserves and shares stories form everyday residents of West Michigan, will be at this year’s 49th Festival of the Arts, set for June 1, 2, and 3. The trailer will be there to collect stories from Festival volunteers and participants.

 

David Abbott, Festival’s Interim Director

“We are hoping to capture the best memories people have of the event,” Abbott said.

 

Memories like a young boy’s first taste of the Greek favorite souvlaki. 

 

“Growing up I had never had the opportunity to try anything different, to try anything new,” Abbott said. “I remember that souvlaki that very first year that I had it.”

 

The Holy Trinity Greek Orthodox Church is one of the oldest non-profit food vendors at Festival, still providing souvlaki — usually seasoned grilled meat on a skewer served in a bun — at Festival, which for many has become a tradition. This year, the church will be joined by 18 other non-profit food vendors, many of which rely on Festival as their major funding source for the year.

 

“I have been a part of Festival for really all of my life, singing in high school, singing in church choirs, being at calder Plaza with the Gay Men’s Chorus. It’s been a fantastic ride and I am honored to be able to have this position to provide leadership.”

 

Abbott easily admits he is excited to be part of an organization that has offered so much to the community and largely has been organized and hosted by all volunteers. Abbott’s is the organization’s first employee. 

 

“For many of those [49] years we were known as the largest all-volunteer run festival in the United States of America and it really is because of Grand Rapids that we are able to do this year after year after year,” he said.

 

While Abbott is starting to think about the 50th Festival of the Arts, he is more focused on the upcoming 49th event set for June 1, 2, and 3 in downtown Grand Rapids and has been working with this year’s co-chairs Jessi Nix Gould and Missy Bush. The 49th Festival of the Arts encompasses Rosa Parks Circle, the plaza that is home to Calder’s La Grande Vitesse, and Kendall College of Ferris State University’s gallery on Pearl Street, where the Regional Arts Exhibit will be showcased.

 

And what is Abbott excited about for this year’s event?

 

“One of the co-chairs Jessi Nix Gould developed a partnership with the Grand Rapids Com-Con featuring comic book artists right in Rosa Parks Circle,” Abbott said. “They are going to be featuring a costume contest both on Friday and Saturday.”

 

Also this year, an anonymous donor came forward wanting to host a photo contest of the Sixth Street Bridge to celebrate the bridge’s history, Abbott said. One of the oldest bridges in the city, the Sixth Street Bridge was constructed in 1886 and was one of the first to cross the Grand River. 

 

For more about Festival, visit festivalgr.org.

‘VOICES: a community history project’ taking reservations for Wyoming Public Library appearance Oct. 23-26

 

By Victoria Mullen, WKTV

 

Wyoming-Kentwood Community Media’s VOICES: a community history project powered by WKTV is taking reservations for its appearance at Wyoming Public Library (3350 Michael Ave SW, Wyoming, MI) Monday-Thursday, Oct. 23-Oct. 26, from 10am-8pm*.

 

VOICES collects, preserves, and shares the stories of West Michigan people from all backgrounds and beliefs, with a focus on Wyoming, Kentwood and the greater Grand Rapids area. It’s a free public service, offering a comfortable video recording studio with a relaxed atmosphere.

 

High-tech video and audio equipment records the stories of our neighbors, friends and family — any story from anyone — that make up the fabric of our lives and our community. Participants tell their stories of hardships and successes, of what shaped them and their families into the kind of people they are today. Our lives, experiences, joys, sorrows, triumphs and tragedies are what make us all human.

 

Interviews usually take place between two people who know and care about each other. They can be friends, family or mere acquaintances. At the end of each 40-minute recording session, participants receive a complimentary DVD of their interview. Each recording is also archived with the Library of Congress.

 

VOICES sign at the Wyoming Public Library

Interviews can be “life reviews,” conducted with people at the end of their careers. Or they can focus on a specific period or a specific event in people’s lives, as with war veterans or survivors of an earthquake, flood or hurricane.

 

The project launched at ArtPrize Nine, welcoming scores of visitors to tour our renovated 1958 Airstream® mobile studio and learn more about the oral history project.

 

To reserve a time to tell your story, go here.

 

Upcoming dates at other locations:

 

Monday-Thursday, Nov. 13-16 — Kentwood Public Library (4950 Breton Rd SE, Kentwood, MI), from 10am-8pm*.

 

*Last appointment of the day is 7pm.

‘VOICES: a community history project’ rolls out red carpet at ArtPrize Nine

By Victoria Mullen, WKTV

 

With the second weekend of ArtPrize in full swing and people casting last-minute votes for their favorite works of art, Wyoming-Kentwood Community Media’s VOICES: a community history project powered by WKTV rolled out the red carpet and welcomed scores of visitors to tour our renovated 1958 Airstream® mobile studio and learn more about the oral history project.

 

VOICES collects, preserves, and shares the stories of West Michigan people from all backgrounds and beliefs, with a focus on Wyoming, Kentwood and the greater Grand Rapids area. 

 

VOICES is a free public service, offering a comfortable video recording studio with a relaxed atmosphere. High-tech video and audio equipment records the stories of our neighbors, friends and family — any story from anyone — that make up the fabric of our lives and our community. Participants tell their stories of hardships and successes, of what shaped them and their families into the kind of people they are today. Our lives, experiences, joys, sorrows, triumphs and tragedies are what make us all human.

 

Interviews usually take place between two people who know and care about each other. They can be friends, family or mere acquaintances. At the end of each 40-minute recording session, participants receive a complimentary DVD of their interview. Each recording is also archived with the Library of Congress.

 

Interviews can be “life reviews,” conducted with people at the end of their careers. Or they can focus on a specific period or a specific event in people’s lives, as with war veterans or survivors of an earthquake, flood or hurricane.

 

VOICES is available year-round. Our mobile studio will be at ArtPrize Nine again, Friday and Saturday, Oct. 6-7 from 10am-8pm*. Thereafter, it will travel to other locations.

 

To reserve a time to tell your story, go here.

 

Upcoming dates at other locations:

 

Monday-Friday, Oct. 16-20 — Wyoming Public Library (3350 Michael Ave SW, Wyoming, MI) from 10am-8pm*, and Monday-Thursday, Oct. 23-Oct. 26, from 10am-8pm*.

 

Monday-Thursday, Nov. 6-9 and Monday-Thursday, Nov. 13-16 — Kentwood Public Library (4950 Breton Rd SE, Kentwood, MI), from 10am-8pm*.

 

*Last appointment of the day is 7pm.

WKTV’s ‘VOICES: A Community history Project’ launches at ArtPrize Nine

 

Announcing the rollout of VOICES: A community history project powered by WKTV at ArtPrize Nine! ‘VOICES’ is the local and regional oral history project powered by WKTV Community Media.

 

Our portable recording studio travels throughout Wyoming, Kentwood—the entire Grand Rapids metro area—gathering the true-life stories—any story from anyone—that make up the fabric of our lives and our community. Our mission is “to collect, share and preserve the stories of people in our community”—the stories of our lives; the stories of people from all walks of life.

 

Our 28-foot, vintage Airstream® Overlander trailer will be parked across from Rosa Parks Circle on Monroe Center Ave. NW Friday and Saturday, Sept. 22 and 23; and at the intersec- tion of Monroe NW and Lyon NW, Friday-Sunday, Sept. 29-Oct. 1.

 

VOICES invites ArtPrize attendees to stop on by, have a look at this beautifully restored Airstream, get to know us and, if they’d like, to tell us their story. You can talk about any- thing — your love for art, your favorite family memory, an event in your family’s life — whatever it is, as long as it’s you or your family’s personal oral history, it’s worth it.

 

After ArtPrize, VOICES will roll on! The VOICES Airstream will make regular appearances at various locations throughout Kent County, beginning with the KDL Wyoming Branch Oct. 16-20 and 23-26. Then it’s on to the Kentwood Public Library Nov. 6-9 and 13-16. More dates are currently being negotiated.

 

To reserve a time to tell your story, go to www.wktvvoices.org. Registration is always FREE— bring a friend or family member to talk about your memories, your history, your life!

 

There are only a limited number of time slots available, so be sure to register TODAY!

 

Your memories. Your history. Your life.