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Amy Earnhardt Thought Jessica Simpson Was After Dale Jr.

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This is not a feud. This is a no, ma’am.

During a recent episode of Dale Earnhardt Jr.’s Bless Your Hardt podcast, his wife Amy Earnhardt shared a story from the late 2000s that’s less celebrity drama and more playful girlfriend instinct.

It’s a tale involving pop-turned-country star Jessica Simpson, a NASCAR bus, and one unforgettable dream.

When Amy Was Actually a Fan

The moment goes back to 2008 or 2009, when Amy was dating Dale Jr. and visiting him at the racetrack.

She heard that Simpson was there too — and at the time, she was genuinely excited. They were the same age. Both from Texas. Amy says she’d always been a fan.

Read More: Jessica Simpson’s Heartbreak Anthem ‘Fade’ Shines a Light on an Ex’s ‘Empty Promises’

So she asked Dale Jr. if someone could arrange for the “Irresistible” singer to stop by the bus so they could meet.

The Dream That Changed the Vibe

Dale Jr. gently shut the idea down — and then showed Amy a clip from earlier that day.

In the interview, Simpson joked that she once had a dream where she married Dale Earnhardt Jr. in a treehouse.

Amy’s response? Immediate clarity. Suddenly, meeting Jessica Simpson was no longer on the agenda.

A Playful Boundary, Firmly Set

Amy told the story with a laugh, explaining that after seeing the clip, she decided she didn’t want Simpson anywhere near her “man” — not out of jealousy, but out of pure, absolutely not energy.

Read More: Jessica & Eric: The Divorce Isn’t Final… and Maybe the Feelings Aren’t Either

The moment became an inside joke that apparently stuck.

One Less Pair of Shoes

Amy also joked that she hasn’t bought a Jessica Simpson shoe or bag since — teasing that she felt Simpson was “trying to fish my man.

Again: said with humor, not heat.

Dale Jr. and Amy began dating in 2009, kept their relationship mostly private for years, and were married on New Year’s Eve in 2016.

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Gallery Credit: Billy Dukes





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Monte Dei Paschi Net Profit Surges After Mediobanca Takeover

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Quarterly net profit was €1.35 billion compared with €384.9 million in the year-earlier period, when its results didn’t include Mediobanca.



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Winter Olympics 2026: Where to watch Team USA women’s hockey on Tuesday, Feb. 10

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untitled-design-2026-02-09t144642-941.png
Imagn Images

If you haven’t caught curling fever yet, you’ve got just the excuse to catch the bug. The United States will be going for the gold medal in the mixed doubles event vs. Sweden this afternoon. Granted there’s not much history there, but if a bitter rivalry is what you crave then look no further than the United States’ women’s hockey team looking to close its perfect run through the preliminaries with a grudge match against the squad’s biggest rival — Canada.

Tuesday will also feature a return to the slopes, where Americans Mikaela Shiffrin and Breezy Johnson trying to reach the podium in the women’s team downhill slalom event that Lindsey Vonn was also attempting to take part in before Sunday’s horrific crash. In true Monday morning quarterback fashion, there has been a debate over whether Vonn should have even attempted to fix skis after she tore her ACL two weeks ago. Vonn may be 41, but her father has already weighed in with when he expects to see her race next.

The Milan Cortina Games will run through Sunday, Feb. 22, and in total of 119 events will take place with 245 medals handed out to the athletes. Fans can find the action on NBC and their streaming service Peacock, with an account or a cable login.

The Winter Games have eight main sports, with 16 disciplines. With so many events to keep up with, it can get overwhelming, but that’s where we step in.

Winter Olympics schedule for Tuesday, Feb. 10

Sport

Event

Time

Medal event?

Short Track (Speed Skating)

Men’s & Women’s Qualifiers

4:30 a.m.- 5:20 a.m.

No

Alpine Skiing Women’s Team Combined Downhill 4:30 a.m. No
Skeleton Women’s Official Training Heats 3 & 4 5 a.m. No
Freestyle Skiing Men’s Moguls Qualification 1 5:15 a.m. No
Ice Hockey Women’s Preliminary, Japan vs. Sweden 6:10 a.m. No
Freestyle Skiing Men’s Slopestyle Final 5:30 a.m. Yes

Short Track

Mixed Relay Final A & B

6:48 a.m. & 6:56 a.m.

Yes

Biathlon

Men’s 20km Individual

7:30 a.m.

Yes

Cross-Country Skiing

Sprint Classic Qualifications, Rounds, Finals

3:15 a.m. – 7:45 a.m.

Yes

Alpine Skiing

Women’s Team Combined Slalom

8 a.m.

Yes

Curling

Mixed Doubles Bronze Medal Match – Great Britain vs. Italy

8:05 a.m.

Yes

Ice Hockey

Women’s Preliminary, Italy vs. Germany

10:40 a.m.

No

Luge

Women’s Singles Runs 3 & 4

11 a.m.

Yes

Ski Jumping

Mixed Team Finals

11:30 a.m.

Yes

Curling

Mixed Doubles Gold Final, United States vs. Sweden

12:05 p.m.

Yes

Figure Skating

Men’s Short Program

12:30 p.m. – 4:45 p.m.

No

Ice Hockey

Women’s Preliminary, United States vs. Canada

2:10 p.m.

No

Ixe Hockey

Women’s Preliminary, Finland vs. Switerland

3:10 p.m.

No





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U.S. reaches finals in Olympic curling mixed doubles, will face Swedish siblings for gold

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Korey Dropkin and Cory Thiesse guaranteed the United States its first Olympic medal in mixed doubles curling, reaching the final Monday with a 9-8 victory over Italy at the Milano Cortina Games.

Dropkin, of Massachusetts, and Thiesse, of Minnesota, whooped and hollered after edging the hosts, hugging tightly. Thiesse made her first Winter Olympics appearance at the 2018 PyeongChang Games, placing 8th with the women’s curling team; it is Dropkin’s first Olympics Games.

The duo gave the U.S. its first world title in mixed doubles curling in 2023, a year after they teamed up. 

Curling runs in both of their families, and Dropkin says it’s “like religion” to him.

“I grew up at the curling club,” the 30-year-old told CBS News. “My parents were super involved with a junior program at our curling club. My brother was five years older. He was already curling. I followed in his footsteps. I was like his shadow.”

Thiesse is the daughter of Linda Christensen, who also competed for Team USA and is a two-time U.S. senior national champion and one-time world senior champion.

When is Team USA curling mixed double gold medal match?

Dropkin and Thiesse’s mixed doubles curling gold medal match against Sweden is slated for Tuesday, Feb. 10, at 12:05 p.m. ET.

The Americans will play Swedish siblings Isabella and Rasmus Wrana, who upset the British duo of Jennifer Dodds and Brett Mouat 9-3 in the other semifinal.

Curling - Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics: Day 3

Cory Thiesse and Korey Dropkin of Team USA celebrate after winning the Curling Mixed Doubles semifinals match against Italy at the Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympic Games, Feb. 9, 2026.

Mattia Ozbot / Getty Images


Dodds and Mouat, best friends who grew up curling together, entered the field as favorites and were widely expected to be in the final.

Sweden’s brother-and-sister team are curling together after growing up as rivals. Sweden won bronze in mixed doubles in 2022.

How many ends are there in curling?

Similar to innings in baseball, curling is played in “ends.” At each end, 16 stones are thrown in one direction and a score is determined. In the next end, the stones are thrown in the other direction.

In a curling match, two teams compete to see which can get the most granite stones closest to a bullseye target called the tee by sliding them along a narrow sheet of ice.

The distance between where a player must release the stone and the tee at the other end is about 93 feet (28 meters).

Curling - Milano Cortina 2026 Winter Olympics: Day 2

Team USA’s Cory Thiesse and Korey Dropkin compete in a Curling Mixed Doubles Round Robin match against Estonia at the 2026 Winter Olympics on Feb. 8, 2026.

Richard Heathcote / Getty Images


The sheet is only 5 meters (16.4 feet) wide and both teams’ stones accumulate every round, so it gets crowded.

Each round, for up to 10 rounds, teams have eight chances to slide the specialized 44-pound (20 kg) stones toward the tee. They can aim directly for the center, try to knock their opponents’ stones away or nudge their own stones closer to the target. Strategies include blocking and take-outs.



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Public safety bills move forward in the Roundhouse

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SANTA FE, N.M. (KRQE) – Two public safety bills are moving forward in the Roundhouse, including one headed to Governor Michelle Lujan Grisham’s desk. One bill that passed the House floor on Monday clarifies the legal definition of “harm to self” and “harm to others,” making it easier for judges to decide whether to require treatment […]



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EDSEL DOPE Reaches Agreement With CHUCK D & JOHN DENSMORE Over DOPE Name Dispute

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What briefly threatened to become an unlikely rock-and-rap legal showdown has instead ended with a green light. Edsel Dope, frontman of industrial metal veterans Dope, has officially reached an agreement with Chuck D and The Doors drummer John Densmore regarding the use of the name doPE, the newly launched collaborative project from the two Rock & Roll Hall Of Famers.

The project, announced earlier this year, will see Chuck D and Densmore release their debut album no country for old men on April 18. However, excitement around the record was quickly tempered when Edsel Dope publicly raised concerns over the group’s name, citing his long-standing ownership of the Dope trademark.

Now, per a post shared on February 7 by Chuck D, the issue has been amicably resolved: “We would like to send a special shout out to Edsel Dope from the band Dope for giving us his blessing, surrounding the trademarked usage of the name Dope for our no country for old men collaboration,” Chuck wrote. “We appreciate his love and support.”

The doPE collaboration traces its roots back to Record Store Day 2014, when Chuck D — then serving as an official ambassador — met Densmore during a panel discussion. A year later, Chuck says the idea crystalized via email: “You’ve got the beats, I’ve got the rhymes, let’s make doPE.”

The name itself was designed as a visual and conceptual hybrid that drew from The Doors‘ iconic lowercase logo aesthetic and Public Enemy‘s long-used shorthand, PE.

But the name quickly drew a public response from Edsel Dope, who made clear his issue wasn’t personal. Opening his statement with a friendly “Yooooooo!”, he emphasized, “I am a huge fan of Chuck D, Public Enemy, and The Doors, so the last thing that I want to do is interrupt a creative endeavor from two legends that I admire and respect.”

Still, Edsel underscored the weight the name carries for him: “It is important for me to highlight the 25 years I have devoted to building a band/brand, which has found a good bit of success and built a sizable fan base around the globe,” he wrote. “Those 4 letters ‘dope’ have been tattooed on my knuckles since 1998.”

He also pointed to the legal reality behind the sentiment. “I appropriately registered the artist name dope and I have owned the Trademark, ever since I hit the scene, more than 25 years ago… The paperwork is up to date, and my rights regarding the name are indisputable.”

In the streaming era, Edsel argued, the overlap could create real-world consequences. “Choosing to call themselves doPE would invite a good bit of market confusion, especially on the streaming services like Spotify, where I have more than a million monthly listeners, along with several hundred million combined streams…”

Despite that, his tone remained conciliatory: “Next to the two of you, I humbly consider myself ‘the little guy’,” he wrote. “So if YOU TWO LEGENDS are committed to using MY FOUR LETTERS, please hit me up directly, as I would love to be part of some form of collaborative effort with you.”

He closed with a love letter to both artists’ legacies: “I know every word from Apocalypse 91 & I have smoked more weed listening to The Doors than one could ever imagine. LOVE AND RESPECT TO YOU BOTH!”

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Philips Proposes Extension of CEO’s Tenure After Guiding For Higher Profitability

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Roy Jakobs has headed Philips since October 2022 and the company said it would put his re-appointment to shareholders later this year.



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Four players tossed after brawl in Pistons-Hornets game

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CHARLOTTE, N.C. — A fight between the Detroit Pistons and Charlotte Hornets in the third quarter of Monday night’s game resulted in four player ejections.

Charlotte’s Moussa Diabate and Miles Bridges were tossed, along with Detroit’s Jalen Duren and Isaiah Stewart. Hornets coach Charles Lee was ejected in the fourth quarter after he had to be restrained from going after an official while arguing a call.

The Pistons won the game 110-104.

Duren had the ball and was driving toward the basket with just over seven minutes left in the third quarter when he was fouled by Diabate. Duren turned around to get face-to-face with Diabate, and the two appeared to butt heads. Duren then pushed Diabate in the face with his open right hand, starting a confrontation that lasted more than 30 seconds and ultimately ended with a brief police presence on the floor.

While Pistons forward Tobias Harris was holding Diabate back, Diabate threw a punch at Duren. Duren walked away, and Bridges charged at him, throwing a left-handed punch. Duren retaliated with a punch. Diabate attempted to charge again at Duren and had to be held back.

Stewart left the bench to confront Bridges, who responded with a punch, and the players tussled. At one point, Stewart got Bridges in a headlock and delivered multiple left-handed blows to his head.

Duren called it an “overly competitive game.”

“Emotions were flaring,” he said. “At the end of the day, we would love to keep it basketball, but things happen. Everybody was just playing hard.”

Duren said that opposing NBA teams have been trying to “get in our head” all season.

“This isn’t the first time that people have tried to be like extra aggressive with us and talk to us, whatever the case may be,” Duren said. “But as a group, we have done an OK job of handling that energy and intensity. At the end of the day, emotions got high with everybody being competitive. Things happen.”

Duren did not say how the fight started, referring to the video replay instead.

The Hornets did not make Bridges and Diabate available for interviews after the game.

However, Bridges took to Instagram late Monday night to say: “Sorry Hornets nation! Sorry Hornets Organization.! Always gonna protect my teammates forever.”

Added Lee: “It looked like two guys got into a heated conversation, and it just kind of spiraled from there.”

Crew chief John Goble said in a pool report after the game that the players were ejected because they “engaged in fighting activity during the dead ball. After review, we assessed fighting fouls, and by rule, they were ejected from the game.”

Pistons coach J.B. Bickerstaff defended his players afterward.

“Our guys deal with a lot, but they’re not the ones that initiated, they’re not the ones who crossed the line tonight,” Bickerstaff said. “It was clear, through frustration, because of what J.D. [Duren] was doing, that they crossed the line. I hate that it got as ugly as it got.

“That’s not something that you ever want to see, but if a guy throws a punch at you, you have a responsibility to protect yourself. That’s what happened tonight. If you go back and watch the film, they’re the ones who initiated crossing the line, and our guy had to defend himself.”

Tensions continued to mount at the Spectrum Center after the fight.

Midway through the fourth quarter, Lee was ejected and had to be restrained by Hornets forward Brandon Miller while yelling at officials for a no-call after Charlotte’s Grant Williams collided with Detroit’s Paul Reed.

“Grant was walking down the paint and barely touched somebody, and the guy fell over and that is what we are going to call a foul,” Lee said. “They have a hard job to make these calls, but I don’t think that was the consistency with had been called the rest of the game.”

As for being ejected, Lee said he has to have more control of his emotions.



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Meet Chile’s first rugby team created inside a prison

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VALPARAISO, Chile — At first, the tackles, rucks and mauls were merely survival tactics within the harsh world of prison. But what began as a workshop behind barbed wire has transcended the walls of the Valparaíso Penitentiary Complex to become Chile’s first official rugby team formed behind bars.

The routine is intense. Three days of field training, two days in the gym, and matches every weekend. It mirrors the schedule of a professional league, but this is Rugby Unión Libertad — a sports club officially registered in mid-January with a mission that goes far beyond the pitch: preparing inmates for social reintegration after they serve their sentences.

“Rugby freed me; it healed my soul,” Alex Javier Silva, 48, who has been incarcerated since 1999, told The Associated Press. “Here you have no heart, no mind — you’re not at peace with anything. You’re like an animal.”

Rugby Unión Libertad began to take shape in 2016 as part of a workshop inside the prison walls. Led by the Addiction Treatment Center, the classes initially sparked the interest of around 50 inmates, who began to play with the “pill” — rugby’s oval ball — as a way to ease the weight of their time inside.

Over the years, the workshop evolved into Rugby Unión Libertad, a club that gained enough momentum to face the Chilean national team, Los Cóndores, in 2024.

Off the field, the team became the cornerstone of the Fundación Libertad, or Freedom Foundation. The nonprofit was established in November by a collective of former inmates, educators, psychologists and coaches, and it supports released prisoners through a mix of rugby, training, counseling and therapy.

Three times a week, two coaches enter Valparaíso prison — about 120 kilometers (75 miles) from the capital Santiago — to lead training sessions for Unión Libertad. For two hours, the team’s 27 players practice the strategies, passes and kicks that characterize the sport.

This is precious time spent tasting freedom despite the barbed wire and watchful guards. It is here, on a tiny dirt field surrounded by guard towers, that the players release their anger and frustration that come with life behind bars.

“Violence is rampant here,” said Jorge Henríquez, 42. “There’s a lot of rage; sometimes you explode for no reason, and so (with rugby) you regulate that, you start to distance yourself from conflicts so that rage doesn’t resurface.”

Like many other correctional facilities in Chile, the one in Valparaíso is overcrowded. With 3,351 inmates crammed into a space built for 1,919, it operates at nearly double its capacity, leading to precarious hygiene and health conditions and ultimately fueling a surge in internal violence.

Coach Leopoldo Cerda, a teacher and volunteer who has spearheaded the project since its beginning, explained that playing rugby — a demanding sport by nature — is especially difficult in prison.

“People sleep poorly, eat poorly, and yet they have the physical and mental strength to overcome many obstacles that this sport presents,” he noted, adding that the changes in the players’ attitudes have been remarkable.

“The first thing is discipline, mastering self-control and anger management, since there’s a lot of physical contact in rugby,” said Cerda. “And they’ve managed to overcome that.”

The team has also become a role model for other inmates who hope to join Unión Libertad. “New guys keep arriving. They see from the cellblocks how they train and start preparing, even improving their behavior so they can train,” said Gonzalo Delgado, another coach.

In order to be part of the project, inmates need to have good behavior and cultivate teamwork.

“Many crimes are committed because people don’t know how to use their free time properly,” said the head of the Valparaíso Penitentiary Complex, Isaac Falcón Espinace. Thus, rugby gives inmates the opportunity to “not use it for actions that go against society once they’re free.”

Guillermo Velásquez, 42, was one of the nearly 50 inmates who participated in the first rugby workshop a decade ago, quickly becoming a fan of this unfamiliar sport.

After a short period of freedom, poor choices landed him back in prison in 2019. To cope with drugs and constant fights, Velásquez began developing the idea of ​​founding a rugby team inside the prison.

The dream finally came true in 2022, when he and half a dozen fellow inmates obtained permission to use the prison’s gym after several unsuccessful attempts.

Rugby Unión Libertad was born.

The first practices were very basic, but the group gradually won the support of other inmates and the trust of the prison guards. Sessions moved outdoors, the players gained their own rugby field and volunteers embraced the project.

“Rugby saved my life,” said Velásquez, who left prison seven months ago. “If the Libertad team hadn’t existed inside the prison, society would have had one more criminal.”

The same year it was founded, Unión Libertad entered its first tournament, but in 2024, they truly touched the sky: The players left Valparaíso prison for the first time to face Los Cóndores, the very same Chilean national team that will compete in the 2027 Rugby World Cup in Australia.

“It was an epic battle,” recalled Silva. “Nobody has ever done that in Chile. And there we were, some mere prisoners, playing against them. Everyone was watching, we were on TV.”

The match — held at another prison in the north of Santiago — was a turning point. The project gained scope, visibility and more supporters.

Since its inception, Freedom Foundation has used rugby as the catalyst for social reintegration, providing support including therapy, professional training and partnering with potential employers to help with the process.

“They want to change,” said psychologist and former national rugby player Cynthia Canales, president of the foundation. “We also want to show that there is a lack of opportunities, that we have to address the stigma.”

Reintegration can be complex though, as it depends not only on personal will but on the availability of opportunities outside prison. Very often, the stigma of a criminal record undermines efforts to change.

“Often, many of these men have the desire to change, but all they find are closed doors,” said coach Cerda. “Society remains deeply prejudiced.”

Thanks to the work of the Freedom Foundation, former inmates can keep their intense training routine once out of prison. Now, instead of a tiny, dirt field under constant surveillance, the men train on the vast grass fields of Valparaíso. They no longer play behind bars but for “All Free” — the former inmates’ branch of Unión Libertad.

___

Follow AP’s coverage of Latin America and the Caribbean at https://apnews.com/hub/latin-america



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Preserving African roots, one stitch at a time

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As Black History Month is celebrated in February, one small storefront in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, is telling a much bigger story. Mchete’s African Treasures owner Monica Ashery pieces together more than fabric. Through garments, jewelry, and hand-crafted goods, she works to preserve centuries of African tradition, one piece at a time.”I saw a need out there that African Americans were trying to connect themselves with their root,” Ashery said. That need became the foundation of her business.”I thought I could bring really authentic African products to Milwaukee,” Ashery said. Ashery’s journey hasn’t been without hardship. She grew up in a village in Tanzania, where access to formal education was limited. “I grew up in a village, typical African village,” she said. “So really, I didn’t have the opportunity to learn much. When you go to school, if you’re closing schools in 30 days, you go to a bush and pick up 30 sticks. So every day you throw away one. When you throw the last one, you know that the next day you’re going to school.” She arrived in Milwaukee in 1988 and later graduated from Mount Mary College. Soon after, her health took a serious turn.”At the time they caught the lupus, it had taken 80% of my kidney function,” she said. That diagnosis changed her life — and eventually led her to Mchete’s African Treasures.”When this lady gave me a kidney, she really gave me a second chance of life,” Ashery said. With a renewed purpose, Ashery turned to entrepreneurship.”I needed a job to employ myself so that I don’t have to depend on the government,” she said. She said Mchete’s represents Black history — experienced differently.”I really wanted also to save two cultures and bridge two cultures, the American culture and the African culture,” Ashery said. “We share the color and everything, but we realize it’s different. We are different.”The shop allows customers to reconnect with their ancestry in a tangible way.”I’m showcasing my products, but for them, they have a history,” she said. “They want to celebrate their own culture, where their ancestors came from. In other words, it’s just not an opportunity they deserve. They deserve to celebrate, from whence they came.”Ashery said her understanding of Black history in America grew after arriving in Milwaukee.”I didn’t know Black history existed. We learned about news through magazine and radio. We did not have TV,” she said. Today, Ashery sees herself as a connector, helping people reconnect to their roots while supporting others along the way.”I’m helping people here get what they need,” she said. “Also, I’m providing services because I buy from local traders, not from mass producers.”She handpicks fabrics in her home country and works with artisans across the continent. At least six African nations are represented in her store, including Tanzania, Senegal, Nigeria, Ethiopia, Kenya and South Africa.”We pride ourselves to sell one-of-o-kind items. So when people wear they don’t see themselves in other people,” Asherysaid. For Ashery, Mchete’s African Treasures is more than a business, it’s proof of possibility.”Given that I came from the background of socialism and to come here, you have that freedom,” she said. “You can be anything you want to be so long as you don’t break the law.”And it’s a reflection of how far she’s come.”I feel proud for what I have become myself,” she said. Ashery said she is always available to educate customers and often uses her space for learning and conversation. She wants people to remember that Africa is an entire continent, made up of 54 independent countries, and says she has also done extensive work with refugees from the Democratic Republic of Congo.

As Black History Month is celebrated in February, one small storefront in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, is telling a much bigger story.

Mchete’s African Treasures owner Monica Ashery pieces together more than fabric. Through garments, jewelry, and hand-crafted goods, she works to preserve centuries of African tradition, one piece at a time.

“I saw a need out there that African Americans were trying to connect themselves with their root,” Ashery said.

That need became the foundation of her business.

“I thought I could bring really authentic African products to Milwaukee,” Ashery said.

Ashery’s journey hasn’t been without hardship. She grew up in a village in Tanzania, where access to formal education was limited.

“I grew up in a village, typical African village,” she said. “So really, I didn’t have the opportunity to learn much. When you go to school, if you’re closing schools in 30 days, you go to a bush and pick up 30 sticks. So every day you throw away one. When you throw the last one, you know that the next day you’re going to school.”

She arrived in Milwaukee in 1988 and later graduated from Mount Mary College. Soon after, her health took a serious turn.

“At the time they caught the lupus, it had taken 80% of my kidney function,” she said.

That diagnosis changed her life — and eventually led her to Mchete’s African Treasures.

“When this lady gave me a kidney, she really gave me a second chance of life,” Ashery said.

With a renewed purpose, Ashery turned to entrepreneurship.

“I needed a job to employ myself so that I don’t have to depend on the government,” she said.

She said Mchete’s represents Black history — experienced differently.

“I really wanted also to save two cultures and bridge two cultures, the American culture and the African culture,” Ashery said. “We share the color and everything, but we realize it’s different. We are different.”

The shop allows customers to reconnect with their ancestry in a tangible way.

“I’m showcasing my products, but for them, they have a history,” she said. “They want to celebrate their own culture, where their ancestors came from. In other words, it’s just not an opportunity they deserve. They deserve to celebrate, from whence they came.”

Ashery said her understanding of Black history in America grew after arriving in Milwaukee.

“I didn’t know Black history existed. We learned about news through magazine and radio. We did not have TV,” she said.

Today, Ashery sees herself as a connector, helping people reconnect to their roots while supporting others along the way.

“I’m helping people here get what they need,” she said. “Also, I’m providing services because I buy from local traders, not from mass producers.”

She handpicks fabrics in her home country and works with artisans across the continent. At least six African nations are represented in her store, including Tanzania, Senegal, Nigeria, Ethiopia, Kenya and South Africa.

“We pride ourselves to sell one-of-o-kind items. So when people wear they don’t see themselves in other people,” Asherysaid.

For Ashery, Mchete’s African Treasures is more than a business, it’s proof of possibility.

“Given that I came from the background of socialism and to come here, you have that freedom,” she said. “You can be anything you want to be so long as you don’t break the law.”

And it’s a reflection of how far she’s come.

“I feel proud for what I have become myself,” she said.

Ashery said she is always available to educate customers and often uses her space for learning and conversation. She wants people to remember that Africa is an entire continent, made up of 54 independent countries, and says she has also done extensive work with refugees from the Democratic Republic of Congo.



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