By: Katey St. John
At the Prescod Institute for Sport, Teamwork and Education (PISTE), Olympic athlete and Brooklyn native Nzingha Prescod teaches kids discipline, goal orientation, and focus through the martial art of fencing.
The first iteration of PISTE looked a lot different than the academy Prescod has now built in Starrett City in the East New York neighborhood of Brooklyn.
For one, it was outdoors. In the summer of 2020, Prescod founded “Fencing in The Park” with a fellow champion fencer, Sara Taffel. Eventually, this outdoor summer activity evolved into an academy with various programs, education and training.
Fencing can be costly—the equipment alone can easily set you back hundreds of dollars, not to mention coaching and tournament expenses.
“It becomes exclusionary who can participate unless there are systems, generation after generation, passing the skill on, and also eliminating barriers,” Prescod said.
PISTE Academy does its part in eliminating these barriers by offering all of its classes and equipment free of charge.
As a kid growing up in Flatbush, Prescod participated in the Peter Westbrook Foundation, a fencing academy dedicated to exposing black and brown youth to the sport of fencing. Its namesake founder was the first Black American to win an Olympic medal in fencing.
“I wanted to bring it back to where I grew up and also expose more populations to the sport,” Prescod said. “Growing up, it was a very exclusive sport and still is.”
Now a two-time Olympian and Pan American Games champion, Prescod is following Westbrook’s lead in her own community.
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