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St. Paul small business owners donate money to Mali Center

St. Paul small business owners donate money to Mali Center

The huge beige brick building near St. Paul’s North End houses a group of BIPOC and women-owned small businesses, ranging from a clothing retailer and mental health professionals to an entertainment company and several personal trainers.

Despite the obvious differences in their businesses, entrepreneurs Malian centeropened in June, has three important things in common: they are deeply committed to their community, wear many hats, and go back a long way with Tyrone Minor.

Minor, founder and visionary of the Mali Center at 576 Front Ave., grew up in the Rondo area, attended St. Paul Central High School, Drake University and the University of Minnesota, and now works as a physical education instructor in Osseo, Minnesota. .

A gifted track and field athlete, Minor is also the owner of the personal training business Chizel Inc. and health and fitness companies The FIT Laboratoryboth of which are now part of the Mali Center.

“I’m at a point in my life where I’m starting to think about the legacy I’m leaving,” said Minor, who recently celebrated his 54th birthday.

When the longtime landlord decided not to renew Minor’s lease on FIT Lab in 2023—”after seven years of never missing a rent payment,” Minor said—he knew it was time to take the plunge.

“When you own commercial real estate, you can provide opportunities for entrepreneurs,” Minor said. And that’s exactly what he does at the Mali Center, offering business owners access to private offices, gym equipment, meeting space and an ecosystem of community-driven entrepreneurs.

“Dream Big”

“We met in third grade,” Eric Goodloe said of Tyrone Minor.

Goodloe is now President Fairvater Foundationa non-profit organization that introduces golf to black youth.

Golf teaches kids sportsmanship, honesty and ethics, Goodloe said, “because you have to call the penalties.”

When Minor was renovating the 5,400-square-foot building that would become the Mali Center, he asked Goodlow what the Fairway Foundation needed.

“A net,” Goodloe said, “so golfers can practice their shots.” “He told me to ‘dream big.’ »

A young girl swings a club in front of a virtual golf simulator.
Havanna Smith, 9, of St. Paul, practices on a golf simulator at the Mali Center. (John Auty/Pioneer Press)

The Fairway Foundation now has its own golf simulator at the Mali Center. To the delight of the guys, the simulator will allow golfers to continue training in the winter months.

Dr. Jermaine M. Davismotivational speaker, author and professor, Minor was also approached to become part of the Mali Center.

“What made you want to be a part of this?” he asked Davis.

Davis, who travels widely giving presentations and keynote speeches, said he needed a place where he could teach and conduct workshops.

A man in a blue dress shirt smiles while speaking
Motivational speaker Dr. Jermaine M. Davis speaks at the Mali Center in St. Paul’s North End on Wednesday, October 23, 2024. (John Auty/Pioneer Press)

The Mali Center calls it the “ingenuity room” and is designed as a large conference room with tables, sofas and the necessary equipment.

Anisha Kelly, a mental health professional who runs her company Purpose Health and Wellness out of the Malian Center and is working toward her clinical license, also has hopes for the Ingenuity Room.

Kelly, who used to run with Minor, said she hopes to use the Ingenuity Room to host group therapy sessions, such as grief group counseling and a group for first responders of color.

Dr. Sheila Sweeney, psychotherapist, author and speaker Worlds and puzzleswho first met Minor through a fitness class, said she had a number of reasons for moving her practice to the Mali Center.

Sweeney, who has a private office, said she can close the door when she needs privacy and can also collaborate with entrepreneurs like Kelly, Davis and Dr. Qasim Abdur Razzak. “When I’m here, I’m in the community,” Sweeney said.

Razzaq, a speaker, author and psychotherapist, said he is working to get more black men into the mental health field.