Native Drums

Savannah Grove Baptist Church

Explore the powerful symbolism of drums in African American culture, once tools of communication and resistance during the darkest times of slavery. We confront the lingering shadows of economic exploitation and the pervasive influence of media and religion in controlling black narratives. Let’s reexamine the role of the black church and its mission to fight systemic injustices, urging a return to prophetic ministries that prioritize humanity and community over material wealth. This podcast episode is not just a reflection of the past but a call to action for the future, urging us to build a more just and liberated world.

  1. -5 J

    From Coach To Superintendent

    Send us Fan Mail A lot of people imagine superintendents as “career administrators” who climbed a neat ladder. Bernard McDaniel’s story is messier, more human, and far more useful. From teacher and football coach to principal, district leader, and now Superintendent of Lee County Schools, he breaks down the real moves that shaped his leadership and the hard moments that tested it. We talk about how athletics and education leadership overlap in ways most people miss. Bernard shares why being named South Carolina Athletic Administrators Association Superintendent of the Year matters to him, and how coaches can become mentors, disciplinarians, and steady guides for kids who need a strong example. He also makes the case that small rural school districts deserve the same respect and fair opportunities as larger systems, especially when it comes to student athletics, resources, and visibility. Then we get practical about one of the biggest K-12 challenges right now: teacher recruitment and retention. Bernard explains Lee County’s Grow Your Own program, including alternate certification pathways, Praxis and Principles of Learning and Teaching support, and why “building from within” creates continuity and commitment that outside hiring often can’t match. If you care about rural education, building a teacher pipeline, or preparing for roles like principal or superintendent, this conversation lays out what “being ready” actually looks like. If this resonated, subscribe to Native Drums, share the episode with an educator or coach who leads with heart, and leave a review so more listeners can find the show. Support the show

    25 min
  2. 12 AVR.

    What Do You Owe Your Ancestors And Your Vote

    Send us Fan Mail A single deed can hold a whole world. We talk with Terry James, founder and executive director of the Jamestown Foundation, about what it takes to protect Black family land and turn it into a public place of learning. Terry walks us from the foundation’s start in 2007 to the annual Jamestown celebration, where storytellers, craftspeople, Tuscarora artists, and historical reenactors help visitors understand life during Reconstruction and beyond.  We also dig into the award-winning attention Jamestown has received, including major news recognition and an Emmy win for “Our Family’s History: The Story of Jamestown.” That visibility sparks something bigger than headlines: it draws people from across the country who are hungry for African American history that is specific, documented, and rooted in place. Terry shares the gripping story of Irvin James buying 109 acres in the 1870s, signing with an X, and pushing forward when the odds were designed to stop him.  From there, the conversation widens into genealogy research and civic engagement. We talk DNA testing, archives, census and estate records, and the emotional moment when family history becomes proof. Terry also brings practical voter registration guidance for South Carolina, including how to check status on scvotes.org, what “inactive” really means, and why voting rights history still shapes what happens today. If you care about genealogy, Reconstruction-era history, African American landownership, and voter registration facts, this one connects the dots.  Subscribe for more conversations like this, share the episode with someone who cares about local history, and leave a review with the biggest question you’re still trying to answer about your family or your vote. Support the show

    49 min
  3. 29 MARS

    Tracing African Roots From Genesis Through Egypt

    Send us Fan Mail The version of the Bible most of us grew up with had a quiet message baked into the pictures, the movies, and even the way history got taught: Black people were missing from the sacred story. That claim doesn’t hold up when you read with a map open and the text taken seriously, so we invited Dr. Antonio Black, pastor of Green Hill Baptist Church, to walk with us through what scripture actually says about Black presence in the Bible.  We start with the foundation, Genesis and the family of Noah, then follow the lineage tied to African nations and the names that keep showing up across the Old Testament: Cush, Mizraim, Put, Canaan. From there we connect the dots through biblical geography, intermarriage, and the ancient world surrounding Egypt and North Africa. We also dig into major figures people think they already know: Moses and Zipporah, Joseph’s life in Egypt, Judah’s Canaanite marriage, and what those details imply about the look of the people at the center of biblical history.  Then we bring it home. We talk honestly about why so many young Black minds feel pushed away from Christianity, especially when the Bible was weaponized to defend slavery and dehumanization. We explore what changes when representation is truthful, when teaching tools match history, and when we rebuild connection through study, research, and better visuals, including graphic novels and modern technology.  If you care about Black history, biblical scholarship, Christian faith, and reclaiming identity through truth, press play, then share this with someone who’s ready to read deeper. Subscribe, leave a review, and tell us what passage you want us to unpack next. Support the show

    31 min
  4. 27 MARS

    When Caring For Others Becomes A Ministry

    Send us Fan Mail You can hear it in Marilyn McKnight’s voice right away: for her, caregiving is not a transaction, it’s a calling. Marilyn is the president and CEO of Peace Love And Glory Home Care LLC, and she joins us during Women’s History Month to talk about what it really takes to serve families with dignity, consistency, and faith. She shares how years of experience across roles in home care and health care prepared her for the step that changed everything: opening her own agency in Bishopville and building a team rooted in peace, love, and giving God the glory. We get practical and specific about non medical home care services. Marilyn breaks down what caregivers can do in the home, from bathing and dressing to meal prep, light housekeeping, errands, laundry, medication reminders, and companion care. She also explains who home care can support, including older adults as well as clients with autism, disability, special needs, DDSN services, VA related support, respite care, and private pay clients. If you’ve ever searched for home care, senior care, or caregiver help for a parent, this conversation helps you ask better questions and spot the difference between a “title” and true passion. We also tackle the confusing part: home care versus home health, Medicaid versus Medicare, and how the Medicaid waiver process can limit or expand hours through Community Long Term Care COTC and plans like Healthy Connections. Marilyn shares how families sometimes supplement Medicaid covered hours with private pay, and why trust and respect matter as much as scheduling. Finally, she invites the community into her 10-year celebration, designed as a free praise and worship night with free admission and a free meal, focused on unity and a reset for the heart. If you found value here, subscribe, share this with someone caring for a loved one, and leave us a review so more families can find these resources. Support the show

    32 min
  5. 22 MARS

    If Democracy Is “We The People” Who Are You Hearing?

    Send us Fan Mail The fastest way to lose your community is to stop listening to it. Josiellia Williams,  sat with Senator Maggie Glover for a wide-ranging, deeply personal talk about what real representation looks like in South Carolina politics and why she believes every elected seat is an “assignment” that belongs to the people who put you there. From the start, she takes us back to the early campaigns, the purple-and-gold momentum, and the lesson that never leaves her: you can’t govern on one vote, one family, or one ego.  We dig into the policy fights that tested that philosophy. Senator Glover shares what it felt like to walk into the State House and see the Confederate flag displayed in the chambers, and why she introduced the first House legislation to remove it. She connects the history to the present with a clear-eyed view of how symbols shape power, who gets heard, and what it takes to move change through two chambers when emotions run high and accountability gets blurry.  Then we shift to bread-and-butter outcomes: education funding, the South Carolina educational lottery, and how the Life scholarship approach can open doors for students who need a fair shot. We also explore the long, complicated story of I-73, including the overlooked role of a young Florentine, Anthony Cooper, whose research helped shape the proposed route, and why recognition and resources don’t always follow the people who do the work.  We close with a direct call on voting rights and voter registration: purges, ID hurdles, misinformation, and what it will take to show up in 2026 and beyond. Subscribe, share this conversation with someone who cares about democracy, and leave a review, then tell us: what’s the biggest barrier to voting in your community right now? Support the show

    1 h 11 min
  6. 15 MARS

    What Happens When A Community Forgets Its Own Playbook

    Send us Fan Mail History doesn’t always announce itself while you’re living it and that’s the thread we keep pulling in our conversation with Elaine Reid. She came home looking for a job, walked into a local newsroom, and soon became the first African American anchor woman on WBTW TV 13 News. That single change in who held the mic reshaped access, trust, and visibility for Black communities across the South Carolina Pee Dee. We talk through how that broadcasting path grows into deeper civic work: reporting in the era of cut film, hosting the community-focused talk show “Happening Now,” and then getting drawn into campaigns because she could communicate across communities. Elaine shares the backstory many people never hear about DC home rule, the Sixth District Black Caucus, and the political chain of events involving Congressman Macmillan, John Jenrette, and the groundwork that helped open doors for future leaders, including early connections to Jim Clyburn. Along the way, we reflect on leaders like attorney Mordecai Johnson and the long strategy behind Brown v Board of Education. Then we bring it to the present. Elaine explains why the caucus model still matters, why voter registration must be matched with voter turnout, and why local issues like affordable housing and neighborhood investment require regional coordination. She also speaks plainly about today’s political climate, what she sees as attacks on public institutions like the Department of Education, and why she stays on Darlington City Council even when the work is exhausting: faith, purpose, and an “assignment” to keep showing up. Subscribe for more Native Drums conversations, share this episode with someone who cares about local politics and Black history, and leave a review telling us what lesson from the past we should bring forward next. Support the show

    43 min
  7. 8 MARS

    When Purpose Meets Care: Turning A Calling Into Limb-Saving Work

    Send us Fan Mail A quiet statistic hides in plain sight across the South: diabetes is stealing mobility, dignity, and years often starting with the feet. We sat down with Dr. Hillery Dolford, a family nurse practitioner with a doctorate in nursing, to unpack how culture, diet, and inactivity can outweigh genetics, and why early action on rising A1C is the difference between management and crisis. She breaks down Type 1 versus Type 2 with uncommon clarity, then makes the case for simple, high-impact changes: water over sugary or “zero-sugar” drinks, steady movement. The story turns personal and practical as Dr. Hillery traces her path from CNA to wound care leader and founder of Sweet Feet, a clinic focused on diabetic foot care and limb salvage. She shares results from a local study that saw zero amputations among high-risk patients during the project, highlighting how meticulous foot exams, callus control, toenail care, and swift vascular referrals prevent ulcers from becoming life altering wounds. Along the way, we hear how faith shapes the spa's warm atmosphere. Gospel music, laughter, and careful listening, so patients leave with lighter steps and renewed confidence. We also talk purpose and entrepreneurship. Dr. Hillery’s advice for women starting a business is direct: know your why, and find mentorship that offers more than words. The right voices can pull you back to your calling when life gets loud. Her mentorship story, being called out of an interview line and sent back to nursing school with tangible support, shows how community changes trajectories. If you’re ready to rethink daily habits, protect your feet, and reconnect with purpose, this conversation delivers science, strategy, and soul. Subscribe, share with someone who needs a nudge toward water first habits, and leave a review with your top insight to keep the conversation going. Support the show

    25 min
  8. 1 MARS

    From Salon Chair To Catering Empire

    Send us Fan Mail A wood stove, a hot plate, and a room full of doll babies: that’s where Vea Ella Gee culinary story begins, and it carries her from a bustling beauty salon to a beloved catering business that’s fed weddings, offices, and whole communities. We sit down during Women’s History Month to trace a life built on family recipes, bold pivots, and the kind of grit that turns passion into a plan. We start with the heirloom flavors that shaped her craft—pound cake so iconic it was eulogized, sweet potato pies, collard greens,  cabbages and the Saturday night lessons that stitched technique to memory. Then we follow the unexpected bridge from salon chair to serving table: clients tasting samples, asking for breakfast with their blowouts, and eventually trusting Vea Ella to style the bride and cook the reception. As demand swelled, she made the tough call to go full-time into catering, proving that service, timing, and care translate across industries when you listen to your customers. The conversation turns practical and generous. Vea Ella shares hard-won small business advice: report your income, pay into Social Security, and set up your own benefits because independence doesn’t come with a safety net. Don’t cling to clients; treat them with abundance. Learn from one unhappy review without forgetting the ten who loved their meal. And when life hits hard, keep a center; she worked through grief with grace, honoring her mother’s legacy of help and hospitality. Finally, we look ahead. Vea Ella is building a frozen food line—biscuits and yeast rolls ready to bake, donuts you can “rise and fry” a smart, scalable step that keeps soul food close to home ovens while easing the wear and tear of large events. She still offers small group lunches with 24-hour notice and stays reachable on Facebook under Appetite Delight or her name. If you’ve got connections in grocery or distribution, we’d love your guidance as she takes this next leap. If this story fed your spirit, follow the show, share it with a friend, and leave a review so more people can find Native Drums. Your support helps us spotlight women whose work keeps our communities strong. Support the show

    21 min

À propos

Explore the powerful symbolism of drums in African American culture, once tools of communication and resistance during the darkest times of slavery. We confront the lingering shadows of economic exploitation and the pervasive influence of media and religion in controlling black narratives. Let’s reexamine the role of the black church and its mission to fight systemic injustices, urging a return to prophetic ministries that prioritize humanity and community over material wealth. This podcast episode is not just a reflection of the past but a call to action for the future, urging us to build a more just and liberated world.