BLACK mobile logo

district of columbia

community

20th H Street Festival Highlights Black Businesses, D.C. Pride

September 24, 2025

The H Street Festival in Northeast D.C. attracted an estimated 160,000 attendees and featured around 250 vendors, showcasing the area as a cultural hub for creativity and economic development. The 2. 5-mile corridor celebration, which has been running for 20 years, highlighted local Black entrepreneurship, art, food, and cultural performances across more than a dozen stages.

Who is affected

  • Local Northeast D.C. residents and businesses
  • Black entrepreneurs and artists who showcase their work at the festival
  • Approximately 160,000 festival attendees
  • H Street corridor business owners and vendors (including established businesses like The Daily Rider, Jerk at Nite, Ethio Vegan, and Albert C. Hillman Barber Shop)
  • DMV (D.C., Maryland, Virginia) natives and performers
  • African American communities in D.C.
  • Visitors from around the region

What action is being taken

  • H Street Main Street is organizing and expanding the annual H Street Festival
  • Local businesses are participating as vendors and experiencing increased foot traffic and revenue
  • Musicians and performers are providing live entertainment across more than a dozen stages
  • The National Guard is currently patrolling throughout the District
  • Entrepreneurs are using the festival to showcase their businesses and potentially establish brick-and-mortar locations
  • Community members are actively working to change negative narratives about predominantly African American neighborhoods

Why it matters

  • The festival provides economic opportunity for local businesses and entrepreneurs, with some vendors eventually developing into full-scale brick-and-mortar establishments on H Street
  • It creates unity and community in a city facing challenges with gun violence (where 73% of homicides are gun-related, according to a 2023 Alliance for Gun Violence Fact Sheet)
  • The event celebrates and preserves the cultural heritage of a historically Black neighborhood that overcame economic dormancy following the 1968 uprisings
  • It showcases positive aspects of the predominantly African American community, countering negative stereotypes
  • The festival represents economic strengthening for African Americans, which Anwar Saleem identifies as crucial for success in society

What's next

  • Anwar Saleem plans to make the H Street Festival "bigger and better year after year"
  • The executive director is working on ways to elevate the festival while ensuring economic mobility thrives
  • Saleem believes the H Street Festival model "can be duplicated throughout the city, if we do it right"
  • Unifest is expected to make a comeback next month

Read full article from source: The Washington Informer