FOR BREAKING NEWS VISIT WWW.QNS.COM  JANUARY 9, 2020 • QUEENS BUSINESS • THE QUEENS COURIER 27 
  business 
 Joseph Zoleta is the founder of the Black 6 Project. Photos courtesy of Black 6 Coff ee Trading 
 Black 6 Project is ‘Mission Driven, Coff ee  
 Fueled’ by Queens-based military veterans 
 BY ANGÉLICA ACEVEDO 
 When  Joseph  Zoleta  and  his  fellow  
 paramedic partners began their humanitarian  
 and disaster relief nonprofi t, Black  
 6 Project, they didn’t know it would lead  
 them to coff ee trading. 
 “I realized that our humanitarian work  
 has embedded me in the coff ee  world,”  
 said Zoleta, who’s worked as a paramedic  
 supervisor in Queens since 2016. “Th  ey  
 go hand in hand.” 
 Black 6 Project is made up of veterans  
 and volunteers who travel across the  
 globe to serve remote villages with medical  
 and food needs. Th ey’ve conducted  
 numerous humanitarian missions in  
 the Philippines, Puerto Rico, Guatemala  
 and Colombia, since they began the nonprofi  
 t in 2017. Just a year ago, though,  
 they began working with coff ee  farmers  
 in those villages to trade their goods  
 and roast their coff ee right in Long Island  
 City. 
 Zoleta and his network of paramedics,  
 some of which happen to be military veterans  
 like him, created the Black 6 Project  
 out of a passion to help others. 
 Th  e 39-year-old decided to pay homage  
 to his Marine Corps platoon, the Black  
 6, when naming the nonprofi t. Aft er witnessing  
 the collapse of the Twin Towers  
 from his window on Sept. 11, 2001 — a  
 moment he considers life-changing for  
 many reasons including the fact that he  
 interned at the World Trade Center —  
 Zoleta joined the Marine Corps. 
 He  experienced  two  combat  tours  
 in Iraq with the Black 6, and although  
 his unit was known for its strength, he  
 remembers some bad losses as well. 
 “Th  ey’re the ones who fought with me,  
 in the good times and bad times,” Zoleta  
 said. “So I fi gured what better name to  
 give  my  organization  than  what  we  
 called ourselves on the radio?” 
 Now, Black 6 Project conducts missions  
 almost every month. In November, they  
 fed more than 300 indigenous people in  
 the Philippines and are currently organizing  
 another mission to the Bahamas to  
 provide hurricane disaster relief. 
 But it was in October of 2017 when  
 Zoleta was inspired to start Black 6 Coff ee  
 Trading. 
 Photo  courtesy  of  Black  6  Coff ee  
 Trading 
 At the time, he took a small team with  
 him to help with search and rescue aft er a  
 typhoon caused a landslide in Kibungan,  
 Philippines. During the trip, they stayed  
 near a coff ee farm — which he thought  
 was amazing because he didn’t know people  
 grew coff ee in the Philippines. He also  
 thought it was a great coincidence considering  
 he was learning how to roast coff ee  
 back home in Floral Park. 
 Zoleta was determined to take some  
 of the green coff ee to New York City, so  
 he used his backpack, made by the veteran 
 owned organization Backpacks for  
 Life, to carry the 40 pounds of beans up  
 and down the mountains. 
 “A few muscle aches later, I got it back  
 to New York City, and started roasting,”  
 Zoleta said. “It was just amazing coff ee.” 
 He emphasizes the trading aspect of  
 their company so that customers know  
 they source the coff ee themselves and use  
 the proceeds to fund the missions they  
 conduct in those communities. 
 For instance, part of the proceeds from  
 their $18 Café Tío Conejo X Black 6  
 Coff ee blend — which is their fi rst  collaboration  
 with Café Tío Conejo who is  
 based in Manizales, Colombia — will go  
 into building a school right on their coffee  
 farm. 
 “As a charity, I had so much trouble  
 funding the missions, but when I realized  
 we could just use capitalism to fund our  
 missions, I did,” Zoleta said. “Capitalism  
 has a bad stigma but when you fl ip it to  
 create humanitarian work, it makes me  
 feel better about what I’m doing.” 
 Born in the Philippines and raised in  
 Hollis, Queens, Zoleta believes that part  
 of the beauty of being from the “World’s  
 Borough” is that he has a vast network of  
 people he counts on to help him understand  
 the distinct needs of the countries  
 they provide humanitarian aid to. 
 “When I was dreaming of creating this  
 organization, it really made me realize  
 that Queens was a prime location for it,  
 because we all understood and have heard  
 the ineffi  ciencies of government sometimes,” 
  he said. 
 And more oft en than not, their team  
 members are either from or are connected  
 in some way to the countries they  
 help, like his best friend and former Navy  
 corpsman  David  Guzman,  who’s  from  
 Puerto Rico. 
 “As an outsider, you go there and you  
 go, ‘Oh, this is what they need,’ but sometimes  
 they don’t even know how to use  
 those products. Th  ose cultures have also  
 survived multiple disasters, so they kind  
 of understand how to bounce back; our  
 role is just to give them an extra hand if  
 they need it,” Zoleta said.  
 Th  e Black 6 Project has plans to expand  
 into a coff ee truck in order to take the coffee  
 wherever it’s wanted in New York City  
 and convert it into a disaster relief truck  
 whenever there’s a natural disaster right  
 in the U.S. But Zoleta strongly believes  
 that there are places outside of the U.S.  
 that deserve their help, too. 
 “Th ere’s  suff ering that happens daily  
 in countries outside the U.S. … despite  
 any natural disasters happening, there  
 are communities out there that need it,”  
 Zoleta said. 
 He recounted a recent food drive they  
 organized for an Indigenous tribe in the  
 Philippines. 
 “I was so worried about what we’d feed  
 them and if they’d like it, ‘Should we put  
 cilantro in it, would they like cilantro?’”  
 he said. “But they were starving … Th is  
 whole village lined up just to eat whatever  
 was there. Some kids didn’t have shoes,  
 there  were  kids  that  were  completely  
 naked, and they had only one water spout  
 that wasn’t there two years ago.” 
 With the support of organizations like  
 WeWork and Bunker Labs’ Veterans in  
 Residence program and NYU’s Veterans  
 Future Lab, Zoleta is able to keep the  
 Black 6 Project alive. 
 As a husband and father of a 4-yearold  
 boy, he’s reminded everyday why his  
 work is meaningful. Zoleta said he likes  
 to take his son to missions he feels are  
 safe, so that he sees “how good he has it  
 growing up in New York, the biggest city  
 in the world.” 
 “When Christmas comes, he’s always  
 like, ‘Can we bring this to donate?’ and  
 I’m like, ‘How do you know the word  
 donate already?’” Zoleta laughed. “And  
 times when it’s quiet, he always goes,  
 ‘Dad, what’s your mission?’ because he  
 wants me to say it over and over, because  
 he loves it. Hopefully, he gets to continue  
 the work.” 
 
				
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