Cultural Champions awards at Roots Aurora Sept. 6

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A longtime Auroran whose singing voice has uplifted innumerable hearts and minds, and a pair of Aurora restaurateurs so attached to their cultural roots that three generations of their family members hold dual citizenships in their ancestral land, will be honored as Cultural Champions at the 2019 Roots Aurora Festival. The event will be held Friday, Sept. 6, at the Water Street Mall in downtown Aurora. The award celebrates present-day individuals who preserve and present the traditions of their ancestors who helped to build Aurora. The honorees are Barbetta Neil and Jeff and Cindi Reuland.

Barbetta Neil

• Barbetta Neil credits her career as a gospel artist to growing up in a singing household, where her parents performed in a gospel quartet and drew her into the art form at the age of four. By the time she was at Waldo Middle School in Aurora, she was leading gospel groups, and she has directed choirs of all kinds, taught voice, and led musical worship throughout the Fox Valley area for four decades and counting.

She is a regular presence at Aurora events as well as at bible-based churches, high schools, and the entire gamut of festivals, weddings and funerals. She is especially dedicated to what she calls “old-school gospel”, the music that grew straight from the spirituals of slavery time, as well as traditional church hymns.

Cindi and Jeff Reuland

• Jeff and Cindi Reuland, whose Reuland Food Service is synonymous with homestyle delicatessen food and catering in Aurora, are so proudly Luxemburg (they both trace their ancestry to the same town in Luxemburg) that even their four-year-old granddaughter can show you her dual U.S./Luxembourg citizenship papers. As stalwarts of the nationwide Luxembourg American Cultural Society and Center in Belgium, Wis., they have been host to visiting dignitaries from that country and they have traveled to Luxemburg several times. They have supported cultural initiatives such as a statue of the great Luxembourg-American patriot Bernard Cigrand, preserved authentic old country recipes, which they have shared with the public at Aurora Historical Society ethnic events, and are enthusiastic raconteurs of the role of Luxemburgers in Aurora history.

Tightly knit into their hometown of Aurora, he is a graduate of East Aurora High School and she of Madonna High School, their children, Brigit and Ryan, are major operators in the family business and, similar to the little four-year-old, hold dual citizenships.

The 2019 Cultural Champions will be introduced at the Roots Aurora festival at 5 p.m. September 6. The Aurora Historical Society will have a display depicting the history of African American and Luxembourger citizens in Aurora. Other events throughout the evening will include a youth talent show, folk dances, and musical performances. Ethnic food vendors and artisans will be offering their wares. The festival coincides with the First Fridays arts walkabout in downtown Aurora.

For more information see www.rootsaurora.org.

— Aurora Historical Society

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