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Friday, December 27, 2024
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Kenya Native Victoria Kageni Bringing Kenyan Fashion to York

Kenya Native Victoria Kageni Bringing Kenyan Fashion to York
Kenya Native Victoria Kageni Bringing Kenyan Fashion to York. Owner Victoria Kageni-Woodard opens the door to Gusa by Victoria at 252 W. Philadelphia St. (Photo: Gusa by Victoria)

Downtown York is about to get a bit of Kenyan flair. Gusa by Victoria will open at 252 W. Philadelphia St. on Dec. 9, filled with handmade clothing, gifts and fine art pieces from local artists.

Owner and Kenya native Victoria Kageni-Woodard will throw Gusaโ€™s doors wide open next Friday night for a launch party, where Kenyaโ€™s ambassador to America will make a special guest appearance.

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Ambassador Robinson Njeru Githae accepted Kageni-Woodardโ€™s invitation to the bash and will be on hand for the ribbon-cutting ceremony at 4 p.m. The ceremony will be followed by a celebration into the night, complete with local artists, jewelry designers, vendors, live jazzย and even a gourd craftsman.

Kageni-Woodard has lived with her husband in the city for four years and is sinking her roots. This followsย a journey that saw her leave Kenya to study creative arts and textile design at Savannah College in Georgia before moving to the Lehigh Valley to join her extended family.

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Even with her creative arts degree, Kageni-Woodard started out working in construction, but she said she knew since the day she started college that she wanted to open her own fashion store one day.

โ€œThis has been something that Iโ€™ve always wanted to do โ€” share who I am and where I come from,โ€ Kageni-Woodard said.

More than two decades after starting college in America, Kageni-Woodard will fulfill that dream to share her culture with her community โ€” and her four children, who โ€œhave not been able to be immersed in my culture as much as I want them to be.โ€

In the coming months, Kageni-Woodard plans to turn the store into more than just a business, hosting galleries for local artists and classes where people can learn Swahili, as well as inviting guests to share their cultures and stories. She said she is also planning childrenโ€™s summer camps for next year.

Though she still misses her family and friends from her childhood in Kenya, Kageni-Woodard said the ambassadorโ€™s presence at the ceremony will make it feel as though her deceased father is coming to help her start a new journey.

โ€œItโ€™ll be very, very surreal for me,โ€ Kageni-Woodard said. โ€œEven though I havenโ€™t lived in Kenya for a long period of time, itโ€™ll feel like my family is coming to help me into this new home.โ€

Leap of faith: Opening the store will be quite an accomplishment, Kageni said, and she is happy that she โ€œsimply chose to take a leap of faith to do it,โ€ instead of over-analyzing and micro-managing the decision. The restructuring and growth of new businesses in downtown York means she couldnโ€™t have picked a better time to start Gusa, Kageni-Woodard said.

โ€œIt goes a long way to have people around you, people who are supportive and cheering you on,โ€ Kageni-Woodard said, thanking her neighbors at I-ron-ic and others for helping her get the store ready to open on time, even though it needed a lot of work.

Kageni-Woodard likened the process of opening the business to a wedding โ€” where โ€œyou plan, plan plan, and then itโ€™s over in a blink of an eyeโ€ โ€” while also comparing it to a mother going through pregnancy.

With the planning and preparations almost complete, it is now time for Kageni-Woodard to walk down the aisle and bring her store to life.

yorkdispatch.com

 

Kenya Native Victoria Kageni Bringing Kenyan Fashion to York

2 COMMENTS

  1. ongrats on order Vicky, enyewe ur really a hard worker, your late parents would have been very proud of you and i hope they are watching from above, be blessed Gal.

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