U. of C. student documentary highlights university’s complicated relationship with Hyde Park community

It was the use of hand sanitizer, or lack of it, that sparked the creation of a 70-minute film, “The Heart of Hyde Park: Stories of Small Businesses.” So says second-year University of Chicago student Lisa Raj Singh.

She had walked into the Pan-African art and craft gallery Kilimanjaro International on 53rd Street in 2022 when owner Rose Kyoma Garrett, aka Mother Rose, pointed to the door, signaling to Singh to put on hand sanitizer before proceeding into the shop. A confused Singh eventually figured it out and lathered it on.

A week later, Singh was back in the store. But Mother Rose was occupied when a new customer walked in.

“How do I know that it’s a new customer? Because they didn’t put on the hand sanitizer,” she said. “For a split second, I thought, ‘Is it my place to say?’ Then I ask: ‘Please kindly put on the hand sanitizer.’ Mama Rose gives me the nod of approval. And with that, we create a sort of bond and I’m back in the shop a week later.”

Kilimanjaro International has been selling art from American and African artists for over 30 years in the Hyde Park area. Mother Rose has been a mainstay of support for homeless artists, connecting homeless youth to mentors. Since Singh formed a friendship with Mother Rose, she’s witnessed “people come to her shop just to talk to her, to invite her to a wedding, to share food and invite her to dinner.”

“That is what a small business does for the community,” Singh said. “It isn’t a place on a map. It’s the very dynamic mosaic of nods and smiles and interactions that you have with one another. It’s a living thing.”

With Mother Rose as a role model, Singh, the film’s director, and several University of Chicago students collected over a dozen hours of interviews in 2022 going door-to-door to eight Hyde Park small businesses to hear their stories of success and struggle, and hear about their relationships with the neighborhood and the University of Chicago.

“The Heart of Hyde Park” premiered at Doc Films on U. of C.’s campus May 8, bringing students, residents and small-business owners out to view it. The work looks at the nuanced and complex environment that has an elite university operating in a historical Chicago community in the hope of keeping the conversation going about how college students can support small businesses in the area, said Elliot Sher, a first-year student majoring in sociology, who helped with the film. He said that after watching the film, he was most surprised by how big of an impact students can have on the local community.

Wallace Goode Jr., former executive director of the Hyde Park Chamber of Commerce and former associate dean of students and a representative of the Office of Campus and Student Life, was featured in the documentary and answered questions from the audience with other entrepreneurs and community leaders at the premiere.