How One Detroit Mom Turned The HBCU College Tour Into A Journey of Black Joy And Legacy

In Detroit, where innovation and resilience often grow from the same soil, one woman is transforming how young Black students see the world and themselves. Through The Kindred Collective, a Detroit-founded program, social worker and mother Remeta Hicks-Montgomery has reimagined the classic HBCU tour into a week-long, joy-centered passage through Black history and higher education.

For Hicks-Montgomery, the idea wasn’t born from theory but from memory. “I went on two Black college tours in high school, when I was in the 10th and 11th grades. I’ll be honest; I wasn’t the best student. And so when I saw a flyer for the tour in the library, the first thing I noticed wasn’t the schools — it was all the cities and states they would be visiting,” she says. “I’ve always loved traveling, and even though I wasn’t the best student, I knew I wanted to go to college.”

She remembers the excitement of walking “the same grounds as pioneers I had read and researched about and traveling to places I had never been before, “yet being “unprepared for what it would take to actually make it there and thrive once I made it.  I not only lacked confidence, but I also lacked real support. I was the first in my family, and I honestly think my family was just glad I was at a school like Cass [in Detroit] and going to graduate.”…

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