In his teenage years, Crenshaw confronted white supremacist gangs as a founding member of
Anti-Racist Action. In 2004, Mic Crenshaw attended the Economic Justice and Youth Empowerment conference in
Rwanda. In 2014, Afrikan Hip Hop Caravan produced "Afrikan Hiphop Caravan Collaborations" with Soundz Of the South. Crenshaw is the lead organizer of Afrikan Hip Hop Caravan in the United States. While serving as an artist-in-residence at
Benson Polytechnic High School, Crenshaw was awarded a $100,000 fellowship from the Fred W. Fields Fund, to help Oregonians "understand the impact of the opportunity gap on families and communities, inspiring people to help solve it." In 2020, Crenshaw performed at several
George Floyd protests in Portland, Oregon, including
Juneteenth in Oregon. During Black History Month 2022, Crenshaw performed with Mt. Olivet Baptist Church Gospel Ensemble in Portland. Crenshaw co-hosted the
KBOO 11 episode podcast series "It Did Happen Here" in 2020. The podcast traced the roots of Portland community-based anti-racist organizing in the 1980s and '90s to the anti-racist group "The Baldies" in Crenshaw's native Minneapolis, and explored the context and aftermath of the 1989 murder of Ethiopian immigrant
Mulugeta Seraw. The producers were interviewed about the podcast in an
Oregon Historical Society event in 2021. He was also featured in an episode of Minnesota Public Broadcasting's "Minnesota Experience" about the Baldies. ==References==