CxffeeBlack

8 Days Left: Ethiopia Taught Us—Coffee Is Ceremony

Grace Jang

Published on Apr 23

When we visited Ethiopia—the birthplace of coffee—we saw what we’ve always believed: coffee was never meant to be just another commodity.


For the Oromo-Guji people, and for so many Black communities throughout history, coffee is a ceremony—a way to connect, to bless, and to build peace together. Every cup is a chance to share a blessing: “May your house lack no coffee, nor peace.”


At Cxffeeblack, our journey has always been about reclaiming those Black origin stories and restoring coffee’s true purpose. From the beginning, we’ve worked to build a fully Black-owned supply chain—ensuring Black hands own the land, the beans, and the businesses.


Licensing a Cxffeeblack system isn’t just about serving better coffee.

It’s about reintroducing the ritual, the ceremony, and the sense of belonging that coffee originally represented.


Each licensed space becomes a place where stories are shared, culture is celebrated, and community is rebuilt—one cup at a time.


And the impact is real.


🎥 Watch this short video from one of our investors, who saved weekly for three months to be part of this movement. 🙌🏾

That’s what this ceremony looks like—real people, real commitment, real culture.


This is your chance to help bring that ceremony back, block by block 🔥


#Cxffeeblack #BlackSupplyChain #MakeCxffeeblackAgain #DiasporaDrip #BlackOriginStories #PreFranchise #CulturalOperatingSystem #BlackOwnedCoffee #InvestInBlackBusiness #CoffeeLiberation #CommunityInvestment #HonorOurRoot #MemphisCulture #CoffeeIsCeremony


You're the first one here!

Early people don't usually get a prize, so here's a love letter from us.