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Kwizine Art  & BBL Entertainment Management Closed Women's History Month With a Classy Sisterhood Event


By Moses St Louis


I walked into Temple Am Echad without much of a clue about what the evening would hold. Within minutes, I knew this was not going to be just another local gathering. The room looked polished, the energy felt warm, and the details spoke before Betty Lemite even took the mic as the MC for the event.


The Sisterhood Women Empowerment event closed Women's History Month with style, care, and purpose. It felt thoughtful from the start, and that matters because too many events talk big but feel rushed in person.


What happened that day left a strong impression, not only because it looked good, but because it felt intentional.


What made the Sisterhood Women Empowerment event stand out


Some events need time to warm up. This one didn't. The moment guests entered Temple Am Echad, the tone was already set. The décor was tasteful, the layout made sense, and the atmosphere felt both refined and welcoming.



That first impression matters more than people think. When a room feels prepared, guests relax. They stop feeling like attendees and start feeling like honored guests. That's what happened here.


A beautiful setup that made every guest feel seen


The setup was one of the strongest parts of the event. Each guest had enough space, which gave the room a calm and polished feel. Nothing looked cramped. Nothing felt thrown together.


Then came the details that made people pause. Personalized mirrors sat at each station. Makeup kits were ready for use. The décor added charm without trying too hard. As a result, the room felt elegant, but also personal.


A setup like that sends a clear message. You matter. You were expected. Someone thought about your experience before you arrived. In a women's empowerment space, those touches carry weight because they turn the theme into something people can feel.


When guests feel seen, they don't simply attend an event, they carry the memory of it home.



A program that felt polished, personal, and well organized


The event also stood out because it moved with confidence. The planning showed. Timing felt steady, transitions felt smooth, and the pieces worked well together.


That kind of flow doesn't happen by luck. It comes from people who understand how to build an experience, not only a schedule. Kenia Lucien and Betty Lemite clearly put care into both the look and the structure of the event.


Because of that, the celebration never felt scattered. It felt curated. There was beauty, community, and purpose in the same room, and none of it competed for attention. That balance is hard to pull off, yet they made it look natural.


Why Kenia Lucien and Betty Lemite deserve real praise



Good events don't come from decoration alone. They come from vision, discipline, and taste. Kenia Lucien and Betty Lemite deserve credit because this gathering reflected all three.


Plenty of people can organize a brunch. Fewer people can create a room where women feel honored, comfortable, and uplifted at the same time. That's the difference here.


Turning a women's empowerment theme into a real experience


The title "Sisterhood Women Empowerment" could have stayed on paper. Instead, it showed up in the full experience. You could see it in the warm welcome. You could feel it in the room. You could hear it in the way women engaged with one another.


That's what made the event feel honest. Empowerment wasn't treated like a slogan. It was built into the design, the program, and the tone of the day. Guests weren't there to fill seats. They were there to be poured into.



The classy look of the event also mattered. Style is not shallow when it supports the mood. In this case, beauty helped create dignity. The room said celebration, while the program said respect.


How strong event leadership shapes community impact


Strong leadership leaves fingerprints everywhere. It shows in how people are greeted, how a room is arranged, and how the audience responds. Here, the response said a lot. Women looked engaged, present, and proud to be there.


“It’s important to celebrate women empowerment, that’s why it was important for me to be here” words from one of the smiling ladies who simply call herself Jay.



That is what thoughtful organizers can do. They create space where people breathe easier. They make a community event feel safe, joyful, and worth showing up for. During Women's History Month, that kind of work has extra meaning because it gives recognition a human face.


Kenia Lucien and Betty Lemite didn't only host an event. They created a setting where women could enjoy themselves and feel valued at the same time.


A room full of women, and the question of where the men were


One thing surprised me all evening. The audience was about 99 percent female. I did not expect that. Given the purpose of the event, I assumed more men would come out to honor and celebrate women.


That absence stood out because support looks different when it's visible. A women-centered gathering should absolutely center women. Still, that doesn't mean men have no place in the room.



Why men should show up for women's empowerment events too


Some men may hear the phrase "Sisterhood Women Empowerment" and think the invitation stops there. It doesn't. Men can attend respectfully. Men can listen. Men can learn. Men can show that they value women beyond words on social media.


Presence matters. If a man says he supports women, then events like this are one place to prove it. Showing up doesn't mean taking over the room. It means honoring the purpose of the room.

A women-centered event does not shut men out. It asks men to show up with respect and stand in support.


Women should not have to carry every celebration of women by themselves. Solidarity has more weight when it crosses gender lines.


Support looks stronger when the whole community is present


Community support works best when it feels shared. When women gather to celebrate one another, that is powerful on its own. Yet when men also show up in a respectful way, the message gets stronger.



It tells young girls that women's achievements matter to everyone. It tells organizers their work is seen. It tells the women in the room that the applause does not stop at the edge of sisterhood.

That's why the turnout raised a fair question. Where were the men? Hopefully next time, more of them will recognize that honoring women is not a women-only task. It's a community one.


More than a celebration, this event created a lasting feeling


Style can catch your eye, but spirit is what stays with you. This event had both. It looked beautiful, yes, but it also carried warmth that lingered long after the program moved along.


That's a sign of a good event. People don't leave talking only about centerpieces or outfits. They leave talking about how the room felt.


The makeup tutorial added fun, connection, and confidence



The hands-on makeup piece brought energy to the day. It gave guests something to do, not only something to watch. That made the experience more social, more relaxed, and more memorable.


A tutorial like that could have felt random in the wrong setting. Here, it fit perfectly. Beauty was part of the event's tone, so the makeup experience added to the message rather than distracting from it.


Guests had their mirrors, kits, and personal stations ready, so the activity felt smooth and inviting. It created moments of laughter, learning, and confidence. In other words, it gave the room another layer of connection.



Why events like this matter long after the month ends


Women's History Month may end on the calendar, but the need for spaces like this does not. Women need to be celebrated beyond one month. They need rooms where they can be seen, appreciated, and refreshed all year.


That is why this event mattered. It did not feel like a checkbox brunch attached to March. It felt like a reminder that women deserve honor in ways that are public, thoughtful, and consistent.


When a gathering leaves people feeling lighter, stronger, and more connected, it has done more than entertain. It has served a purpose.


The panel discussions and workshops brought beauty, wellness, and culture together


The event also had substance behind the style. A wellness and empowerment conversation grounded the day and gave it depth. Dr. Marjorie Lamarque and Kathia Duverne Douyon, NP, led that session with purpose, healing, and sisterhood at the center.


That balance mattered. Guests were not only treated to a polished setting. They also heard from women who brought insight and care to the room.



The beauty side of the program also delivered. Takida Makeup, lead makeup artist and educator, led a Soft Glam Masterclass while her team created live glam transformations for VIP guests. That added a luxury feel without losing the heart of the event.


Here's a quick look at the people and brands that helped shape the day:

Featured element

Who was involved

What they brought

Wellness panel

Dr. Marjorie Lamarque, Kathia Duverne Douyon, NP

A grounded talk on wellness, empowerment, healing, and sisterhood

Beauty experience

Takida Makeup

Soft Glam Masterclass and live glam for VIP guests

Event production

Kwizine Art, Inc. and BBL Entertainment Management

A polished brunch that blended beauty, wellness, luxury, and culture

Vanity-style setup

Sanycasa

LED glam mirrors that transformed the space

Beverage partner

Rhum Barbancourt

Signature cocktails and gifted mini bottles

Beauty gift bags

BS Mall

Premium makeup brush sets for attendees

That mix of speakers, artists, producers, and brand partners helped the event feel complete.


Food and cocktails



The food was delicious, which came as no surprise. Kenia Lucien and Kwizine Art know food, and that strength showed on every plate.


The cocktails also hit the mark. The two bartenders brought charm and energy, and their drinks helped keep the atmosphere light, social, and festive.


Kwizine Art and BBL Entertainment Management brought the parts together in a way that felt polished and warm. Nothing felt random. Every piece supported the larger mood of sisterhood, self-care, and celebration.



Kwizine Art and BBL Entertainment Management  ended Women's History Month on a high note, and that deserves to be said plainly. Kenia Lucien and Betty Lemite helped create an event that felt classy, empowering, and carefully put together from start to finish.


What stayed with me most was the feeling of sisterhood in the room. It was visible in the setup, the programming, and the way women were welcomed and honored.


More events should follow this example. And next time, the wider community, men included, should show up stronger to celebrate women with the same respect they deserve all year long.

 

 
 
 

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