A loan helped launch a coffee roasting program for youth, and combat the effects of redlining and racism.


Dontavious's story

I grew up between Kansas City and Iowa, where I saw a lot of division, violence, and broken systems firsthand. I lost my best friend when I was 13, and not long after, I ended up getting pulled into the criminal justice system myself. Those experiences made me realize how little opportunity there really is for young people who come from environments like mine. In 2018, with the help of my grandmother who believed in me when a lot of people didn’t, I opened Equal Minded Café on Troost Avenue — one of the most historically redlined streets in America — to create a space where real connections could happen, and where we could start breaking down some of those barriers.

What keeps me going is knowing that Equal Minded Café isn’t just a coffee shop — it’s a movement. We’ve created a space where community comes first: leading protests, hosting events, giving new entrepreneurs a platform, and helping people come together who might have never crossed paths otherwise. Now, I’m taking it even further by launching a program through our nonprofit, Big Ideas Foundation, to teach local youth how to roast coffee, build their own coffee brands, and create their own income streams — giving them real chances at entrepreneurship and ownership.

This work is personal to me. It’s not just about coffee. It’s about making sure the next generation has opportunities that I had to fight so hard to find. It's about building something real that creates change, and I'm committed to seeing it through.


This loan is special because:

It supports a small business owner with 0%-interest, zero-fee capital.



Loan details


About Equal Minded Café

Industry: Services
Years in operation: More than 5 years
Website: linktree.com

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Loan details