Seun Adedeji
Born in Lagos, Nigeria, Seun Adedeji was three years old when he
migrated to Chicago to live with his dad and stepmom, four siblings,
two cousins, and a stepbrother. "It was not a wholesome home," he says.
"Our stepmom was verbally abusive, and dad was a truck driver, away on
the road." The family suffered financial hardship, and young Seun had
to hustle. "I sold candy in school," he says. "I was the candy man. I
upgraded to cannabis in middle school, and got arrested at age 13 for
possession." Known as a respectful student and a tough fighter who
helped kids being bullied, he was offered a choice: get kicked out of
school or take up wrestling. He chose wrestling, won first in league
and second in state. He moved to Arlington, Texas, for high school, and
lived with his dad's sister. "My auntie was the first woman who showed
me unconditional love," he says. "I made a fresh start." He joined the
Future Business Leaders of America club at school and continued to
wrestle, winning a state championship. As an undocumented immigrant, he
was protected by DACA but couldn't get a scholarship for college, so he
moved to Spokane, Washington, and found work as a sales associate with
Sprint phones. "I did well," he says, "got promoted to manager, then to
marketing manager." When he turned 21 and considered opening a cannabis
dispensary, Adedeji found that Washington had reached its limit on
licenses. "That's how I pivoted to Oregon, where there is no limit," he
says, and two years later, in 2017, he opened Elev8 Cannabis in West
Eugene. "Local farmers came together to support me, and I bought on
consignment." But a saturated market and the store's remote location
caused him to close its doors in 2018, and he traveled to eastern
states where cannabis had been recently legalized. "I hired a top
attorney and lobbied to win three licenses in three cities in
Massachusetts," he notes, "and I lobbied for more minority seats at the
table in Illinois." In May of this year, back in Eugene, he reopened
Elev8 Cannabis at 1409 Oak Street, a more convenient downtown location.
"Our motto is: Treat Everyone Like Gold," he says. "I want to pour the
love my auntie showed me into my community and customers."
happening people
photograph and story by Paul Neevel
Eugene Weekly / 18 June 2020
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