Detroit, MI
Metro Detroit family lost loved ones in violent Sudan conflict, gather aid for victims
For Belleville resident Khadega Mohammed and her dad Bashir, the chances of with the ability to immigrate from Sudan, to Saudi Arabia after which to america was like making an attempt to win the lottery.
“Coming to America was a surreal expertise for me. I by no means imagined being right here,” Khadega mentioned.
However in 2007, fortunate sufficient for them, they received.
“My dad utilized for the Immigration Lottery to America. We ended up profitable in 2007. We began with nothing. We began from scratch in Minnesota,” Khadega defined.
Years later, the Mohammed household moved to Michigan, the place Bashir grew to become a pharmacist and Khadega grew to become an advocate for a nation-wide nonprofit known as the Sudanese American Doctor Affiliation.
“It’s a member group that has over 600 members of physicians, docs, dentists, pharmacists by which my dad is part of who’re coming collectively and pulling help to Sudan,” Khadega says.
Khadega says a few of that help goes towards considered one of simply two hospitals which can be nonetheless standing and serving pregnant ladies and pediatric care within the nation’s capital metropolis of Khartoum.
With greater than 70 p.c of hospitals demolished, closed down or forcefully evacuated within the nation’s largest metropolis, Khadega says it has put a pressure on medical care.
“There isn’t a place for ladies and kids to go to. Girls do not know the place like to present delivery,” Khadega says.
The issues all stemming from a not too long ago ramped up, many years lengthy civil battle in Sudan leaving greater than 500 useless, within the final two weeks and over 5,000 injured in simply the final two weeks.
“After we do name again house, you’ll be able to hear the gunshots and the bombs exterior and to be sincere with you, it is a state of affairs the Sudanese folks aren’t acquainted with,” Khadega says.
As for Bashir, in the case of the folks of Sudan, one issues is obvious.
“The battle in Sudan now’s a wrestle for energy. We as Sudanese persons are not fascinated by that. We would like this battle to cease now,” Bashir says.
Greater than 100,000 residents have already tried to flee the nation, and sadly a few of them at the price of their very own lives together with Khadega’s very personal family members.
“My mother, she received the information that her aunt was killed on the way in which leaving Khartoum to flee. Persons are getting killed on the way in which leaving,” Khadega mentioned.
Nevertheless, regardless of how far they’re from their homeland, Khadega says her coronary heart by no means left.
“If you find yourself in a state of affairs like this and you’re so far-off from the battle, you do not really feel prefer it pertains to you. However it is a humanitarian disaster. We’re extra able to serving to than we truly assume. I hope folks right here educate themselves and assist in any means they will,” Khadega says.
For extra data on SAPA, or for extra details about help to Sudan, click on right here.
Detroit, MI
Detroit’s new $50 million Ralph C. Wilson Centennial Park opens with thousands attending
DETROIT (WXYZ) — Detroit’s new 22-acre Ralph C. Wilson Centennial Park officially opened this weekend, marking the completion of an eight-year project that transformed the city’s riverfront with a $50 million investment.
Watch Faraz’s full story on the park’s opening in the video below
Detroit’s new $50 million Ralph C. Wilson Centennial Park opens with thousands attending
The park, formerly known as West Riverfront Park, was reimagined in 2017 before receiving the major gift from the Ralph C. Wilson Jr. Foundation in 2018 that made the project possible.
“You don’t always see this, you don’t always get this, but this is what Detroit needs,” said Alise King, lead singer of The Alise King Experience, who performed at the opening weekend festivities.
King, who describes herself as a proud East Sider, expressed her excitement about being part of the historic opening alongside other performers, including the Jacksons.
“It means the world to be on the same building, the same flyer as the Jacksons. Oh my God. So it means the world. It’s one thing to be a part of something, but to be a part of history, the feeling is unexplainable,” King said.
The new park features a play garden, sports house, water garden, and event spaces, adding to Detroit’s award-winning Riverwalk. King emphasized the importance of having safe community spaces where families can gather.
“When you have parks like this, they work as a safe haven for the community to say, hey, you can bring your family here. You can bring your kids here. You can bring your dog here. It’s saying it’s giving a bigger, a better Detroit, saying we’re improving,” King said.
Mary Wilson, life trustee of the Wilson Foundation, said the park represents her late husband’s vision coming to life.
“Detroit deserves it. People from all over the world will come and see this park because it took great teamwork. Because it took community helping design it, community helping build it,” Wilson said.
Wilson shared that her husband would visit the site daily during development and would be proud to see the community collaboration that made the park possible.
“He would just be so proud. Because it’s all about teamwork. He created teamwork in everything he did. And his life was about bringing people from all walks of life together,” Wilson said.
Detroit Riverfront Conservancy CEO Ryan Sullivan said the park provides the organization’s largest platform for public engagement, with plans for another opening in the spring.
“This gives us the largest platform that we have ever had to engage with the public and welcome them. So, we have a lot planned for the next year, including another opening in the spring,” Sullivan said.
The opening weekend featured Harvest Fest with 35 food trucks and live entertainment, drawing thousands of visitors to experience the new waterfront destination.
To learn more, head to https://www.detroitriverfront.org/events/calendar/2025/10/25/ralph-c-wilson-jr-centennial-park-grand-opening
“This story was reported on-air by a journalist and has been converted to this platform with the assistance of AI. Our editorial team verifies all reporting on all platforms for fairness and accuracy.”
Detroit, MI
Red Wings search for faster starts after two discouraging defeats
Detroit — A good start, and then a consistent performance over 60 minutes, are what the Detroit Red Wings will be looking for Saturday against the St. Louis Blues.
A common theme in the two losses in Buffalo and Long Island — two discouraging losses from the Red Wings’ perspective — were poor starts.
Having to overcome penalties, defensive lapses, then having to overcome a deficit, are all issues that put the Red Wings in early holes — holes they were unable to overcome.
“We didn’t start well in Buffalo,” coach Todd McLellan said. “We responded a little better as the night went on.
“We didn’t start well in New York, and we never got it going. So certainly there’s the on-ice product that has to be worked on, but there’s the between-ears part that has to be managed as well.”
An issue that hindered the Red Wings in recent years was their inability to deal with adversity. When things went against them the other way, they weren’t fully able to get it back going the other direction.
In this two-game losing streak, some bad habits emerged again.
“I didn’t think we’ve (handled adversity) on this road trip,” McLellan said. “We haven’t done a real good job of handling it, and that’s a huge area of growth for this team.
“When it doesn’t go your way, how do you respond?”
After Saturday’s home game against St. Louis, the Wings go on the road again, this time for a five-game trip that eventually heads west. The Wings say they need to create some sort of momentum before going on the road.
They hope the back-to-back losses fuel an urgent response.
“We didn’t have anything going on,” said captain Dylan Larkin, who has scored a point in all eight games this season, of Thursday’s loss. “We didn’t do a good job enough job of anything. We lost the net battles, battles all over the ice. Our penalty kill was good but you can’t lose that many battles in a hockey game.
“Hopefully we get rest (Friday, a complete day off) and then get the emotion back and juice back for the home game (Saturday). Then kind of figure it out on the road. It’ll be a tough trip. We have to find energy and get our spirit going.”
Danielson activated
The Wings activated forward Nate Danielson from injured non-roster and assigned him to the Grand Rapids Griffins.
Danielson, 21, skated in his rookie season with the Griffins in 2024-25 and ranked among the team leaders with 71 games played, 12 goals, 27 assists, with a plus-four rating.
Danielson had an impressive training camp and exhibition season, but an undisclosed injury the last week of the preseason nullified any chance to making the Wings’ opening-night roster.
Blues at Red Wings
▶ Faceoff: 7 p.m. Saturday, Little Caesars Arena, Detroit
▶ TV / radio: FDSN / 97.1
▶ Notable: The Wings (5-2-0) return for one home game before going on a week-long road trip. The Blues (3-3-1) visit Little Caesars Arena Saturday, then the teams play again Tuesday in St. Louis. … RW Jordan Kyrou (four assists, five points) is off to a fast start.
tkulfan@detroitnews.com
@tkulfan
Detroit, MI
Metro Detroit 10-year-old headed to World Series for competition against the best
Back in August, he participated in ‘Pitch, Hit, Run’ regional competition at Comerica Park and won second place among 9- and 10-year-olds in the country.
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