Buy Black CBUS

Black-Owned Eateries + More

1

MARVIN’S

Columbus, Ohio

2

CUT 132

Columbus, Ohio

3

WILLOWBEEZ SOULVEG

Columbus, Ohio

4

ADDELLAS ON OAK

Columbus, Ohio

5

BLACK BOX FIX

Columbus, Ohio

6

SHRIMP LIPS

Columbus, Ohio

7

LIFESTYLE CAFE

Columbus, Ohio

8
9

FLAVOR 91

Whitehall, Ohio

10

J’s SWEET TREATS

Columbus, Ohio

11

WAY DOWN YONDER

Columbus, Ohio

12

LALIBELA

Columbus, Ohio

13

BLU NOTE JAZZ CAFE

Columbus, Ohio

14

HOYO’S KITCHEN

Columbus, Ohio

15

DRELYSE 

Columbus, Ohio

16

NILE VEGAN

Columbus, Ohio

17
18

THE PIT BBQ GRILLE

Columbus, Ohio

19

UPPER CUP COFFEE

Columbus, Ohio

20

WHAT THE WAFFLE

Columbus, Ohio

21

SUPERCHEF’S

Gahanna, Ohio

22

CHEZ RAMA

Columbus, Ohio

23

CREOLE KITCHEN

Columbus, Ohio

24

LA GLORY’S 

Columbus, Ohio

26

ISLAND VIBES 

Columbus, Ohio

27

ADDIS 

Columbus, Ohio

30

BAKE ME HAPPY

Columbus, Ohio

31

BEYOND THE BRIX

Columbus, Ohio

32

LINCOLN CAFE

Columbus, Ohio

33

BAKE ME HAPPY

Dublin, Ohio

34

IRIE JAMERICAN CUISINE

Columbus, Ohio

35

B & K SMOKE HOUSE

Columbus, Ohio

36

THE PIT BBQ GRILLE

Dublin, Ohio

37

THE GOOD KITCHEN 614

Columbus, Ohio

38
39

WYCLIFF’S KITCHEN

Columbus, Ohio

40

FEED ME SANDWICH KINGS

Columbus, Ohio

41
42

TOO GOOD EATS

Columbus, Ohio

43

THE RIBMAN

Columbus, Ohio

44

QUEEN’S TABLE

Columbus, Ohio

45

FORK IN NIGERIA

Columbus, Ohio

46

JNY BAKERY

Columbus, Ohio

47

SAUCE THE CITY

Cleveland, Ohio

48

SQUASH THE BEEF

Cleveland, Ohio

49

AGNES GRILL

Dayton, Ohio

50

GEM CITY MARKET

Dayton, Ohio

51

1ELEVEN FLAVOR HOUSE

Dayton, Ohio

53

CONSCIOUS KITCHEN

Cincinnati, Ohio

54

  • YELLOW

    Dining & Carry-Out

  • GREEN

    Food Trucks | Catering

  • RED

    Nearby Out-of-Town

How We Fight

Byron F. Wilson (Ohio Native – OSU Grad)

#HowWeFight is a common sense response to injustice. Black people are being encouraged to intentionally and exclusively support Black-owned establishments in Central Ohio and beyond. The overall goal is to uplift, empower and redirect dollars to the Black community. We must build, protect and save ourselves. Anyone is welcome to participate in this economic movement for justice and empowerment.

Central Ohio (Columbus) has over 335,000 residents of African descent. According to BlackDemographics.com, Columbus (CBUS) has the 26th largest concentration of Black people in the United States, comprised of Black Americans, Jamaicans, Senegalese, Ghanaians, Nigerians, Haitians, Ethiopians and Eritreans to name a few. CBUS has the second largest Somali population in the United States with estimates between 60,000-100,000.

With the police killing of Tamir Rice in Cleveland, Sam Dubose in Cincinnati and John Crawford III in nearby Dayton, the State of Ohio has had many cases of injustice. Columbus (the capital city of Ohio) named after terrorist Christopher Columbus, has experienced the recent police lynchings and executions of Ta’Kiya Young, Casey Goodson Jr., Donovan Lewis, Ma’Khia Bryant, Andre Hill, Henry Green, Ty’re King, Jaron Thomas. All of them were killed by law enforcement officers and no one has been held accountable to date. Like the rest of the nation, there are countless examples of injustice and terrorism in CBUS. One of the latest cases is the murder of 13-year-old Sinzae Reed. In addition, extreme economic and health disparities are prevalent for Black residents throughout Ohio, especially Columbus.

One day before MLK Jr. was assassinated, Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. pleaded with the community to “Redistribute The Pain”.

In response to injustice, MLK said “Now the other thing we’ll have to do is this: always anchor our external direct action with the power of economic withdrawal… Never stop and forget that collectively, that means all of us together, collectively we are richer than all the nations in the world, with the exception of nine. Did you ever think about that? 

We don’t have to argue with anybody… Now we must kind of redistribute the pain…

Now not only that, we’ve got to strengthen black institutions. I call upon you to take your money out of the banks downtown and deposit your money in Tri-State Bank (a Black-owned Bank)… I’m not asking you something that we don’t do ourselves… We are telling you to follow what we’re doing, put your money there.” Now these are some practical things that we can do. We begin the process of building a greater economic base, and at the same time, we are putting pressure where it really hurts. And I ask you to follow through here…

It’s been over 50 years since Dr. King delivered this message on April 3, 1968. For whatever reason the Black community has failed to follow through. According to Maggie Anderson (author of Our Black Year) and other economic scholars, African-Americans only spend 3% of their money with Black-owned businesses. That means we give away 97% of our money to people outside of our community. No other group does that. The time to change is now. Share Black-owned businesses on your social media networks and encourage your friends and family to ‘Buy Black’.

Additional Resources