The Architecture of Liberation
This piece stands apart because it refuses the familiar trauma narrative. Jay Pitter, a placemaker and urban planning professor, redirects the gaze from Black survival to Black celebration in public spaces. The argument is architectural, psychological, and deeply personal.
The Weight of Public Performance
Pitter opens with a memory that cuts: an eight-year-old child swaying to music in a mall, sharply corrected by a mother who believed Black dignity required stillness. That moment captures generations of code-switching as survival strategy.
The Walrus writes, "All I knew was that she believed that, for Black people, especially poor Black people like us, our survival and dignity hinged on presenting well in public."
This conditioning makes sense within its context. The George Floyd killing in 2020 — nine minutes and twenty-nine seconds of public execution — demonstrated the lethal cost of perceived missteps. Floyd's death became a global flashpoint because it made visible what Black communities already knew: public space can be a death trap for those marked as outsiders.
As The Walrus puts it, "Within my lifetime, the penalty for a Black person perceived to be misstepping in public had never been more clear than it was in the final, excruciating nine minutes and twenty-nine seconds of George Floyd's life."
Pitter argues this baseline — mere survival — is insufficient. The demand must expand: not just safety, but joy.
"The notion that Black people and other groups experiencing disproportionate harm should be able to navigate public spaces without being murdered should be a given. Still, I believe that we should expand our expectations and strive for even more—public joy."
Joy as Practice, Not Accident
The piece distinguishes joy from happiness with precision. Happiness is situational. Joy is enduring — a state of mind built from resilience, gratitude, and belonging.
The Walrus writes, "Happiness, however elusive, has been our preferred pursuit, perhaps because we are implicitly socialized to seek emotions considered positive outside of ourselves. Establishing and maintaining a joyful way of being amid the turbulence of life is a far less attractive proposition given the immense amount of labour required, both as individuals and in the constant making and remaking of community."
This framing rejects the individualistic pursuit of happiness. Joy becomes collective work. Parks, cultural events, walkable communities — these are not amenities but infrastructure for human-scale connection.
Pitter draws on Audre Lorde's bridge-building through shared joy and Elizabeth Mudenyo's practice of "taking joy with both hands." Joy becomes active co-creation, not passive reception.
Carl Cassell's Toronto
The narrative pivots to Carl Cassell, a Jamaican immigrant whose professional credentials evaporated upon arrival in Canada. An economist by training, he worked restaurant kitchens. On city streets, he became invisible.
The Walrus writes, "Where I come from, when we encounter people in public, we respectfully acknowledge their presence, and we expect the same in return."
Cassell found refuge in Trinity Bellwoods Park among young men of all races in the hip hop scene. That kinship sparked a decision: build dreams with his own hands, not pursue them in spaces that refused him.
Irie Food Joint opened in 2001. Its motto: "Food. Music. Art. Culture." The design prioritized Caribbean time — lingering over tables, banging dominos, jumping from live music. Profit secondary to placemaking.
As The Walrus puts it, "The space needed to be well designed but also accessible and sturdy enough to withstand our bombastic cultural expression."
Within five years, Irie became a central gathering space. A second location, Harlem near Gay Village, hosted ballroom nights for Black queer and transgender communities — spaces created in response to exclusion from mainstream queer venues.
The garage door became a living memorial. When Michael Jackson died, patrons wrote messages around a graffiti portrait. The ritual repeated for Nelson Mandela, for Prince. The door layered with grief and love.
In 2008, when Obama won, Black men in the space addressed each other as "Mr. President." Pitter captures the moment: "The giddiness expressed by grown men, who are usually guarded in public spaces, was like nothing he'd witnessed before."
The Tension of Public Space
Pitter acknowledges that public spaces hold contradictory forces. Educator Herleen Arora calls it "poetic tension" — colonial atrocity and land-based oppression on one side, immense possibility and connection on the other.
The Walrus writes, "When I think about public joy, Black or otherwise, I imagine all of these strands, all of our hurts and aspirations, entangled together."
Joy and pain coexist. Ross Gay asks in Inciting Joy: "What if joy and pain are fundamentally tangled up with one another?" This contradiction resonates for anyone who has celebrated in spaces built on exclusion.
Critics might note that Cassell's success story risks becoming exceptionalism — one man's triumph used to suggest systemic barriers are surmountable with enough grit. The piece sidesteps this by emphasizing Cassell's rejection of traditional pathways, not his assimilation into them.
Critics might also note that defining joy remains elusive even as the piece attempts it. The distinction from happiness feels important but underdeveloped — joy as endurance versus happiness as moment captures something, yet the boundary remains porous.
Critics might further note that Cassell's model — prioritizing community over profit — depends on his ability to absorb financial risk. Not every placemaker has five years to build social capital before profitability demands intervene.
"I realized that if I wanted to achieve my dream in this country, I'd have to literally build it with my own two hands, not pursue it in places that didn't welcome me."
Bottom Line
This piece succeeds because it refuses to let trauma be the only story. Pitter demands public space designed for Black celebration, not just Black survival. Cassell's Irie Food Joint proves the model works — when joy becomes infrastructure, community follows. The argument is not that joy erases pain, but that both can occupy the same space, entangled and real.