House Call
From Prison to Purpose: Dr. Amar Skinner’s Museum of Redemption in Suffolk
By Dr. Jerome Dorn
At 444 North Main Street in Suffolk, a once-forgotten building now stands as a powerful testament to transformation, accountability, and hope. Known decades ago as the Castle Inn—rebuilt after a devastating fire—the structure has experienced rebirth. But its owner, Amar Skinner, knows rebirth on a much deeper level.
Skinner spent 11 years in prison, beginning in 1997, after being convicted on serious charges, including second-degree murder and malicious wounding. Yet today, he is the founder of the Ex-Felon Entrepreneurship Retail Museum (EFERM)—a one-of-a-kind institution designed to educate, heal, and ultimately help combat crime.
“My hands and my feet were shackled down long before I went to prison,” Skinner says. “Because the prison was in the mind. Once I unlocked the mind, the spiritual forces unlocked everything else.”
A Life Once Defined by Crime—Now Defined by Change
Growing up in Suffolk, Skinner admits he was entrenched in a life of crime. Prison became the turning point that forced him to confront not just his actions, but his thinking.
When he was released after more than a decade behind bars, Skinner made a personal vow:
“I was determined that I would own every business that I used as a service or a product.”
That determination paid off. Today, Skinner owns six businesses, a tangible symbol of discipline, vision, and reinvention.
The Birth of EFERM: A Full-Circle Moment
In 2021, Skinner transformed the historic Main Street building into EFERM—a museum unlike any other. The space chronicles the history of the prison system, exposes the realities of incarceration, and provides tools and resources for formerly incarcerated individuals reentering society.
More than an exhibit, EFERM is a call to consciousness.
“It promotes living, not killing,” Skinner explains.
“It promotes empathy—placing yourself in the shoes of other people so you don’t make them your victims.”
Through transparency and truth, Skinner believes education can interrupt cycles of violence before they begin.
Changing Futures by Owning the Past
Skinner does not shy away from his history. Instead, he uses it as the foundation of his mission.
“If I do not give this information back to society,” he says, “then I went through everything for nothing.”
His greatest hope is that EFERM reaches young people—especially those who look like him—who may feel trapped by their environment or influenced by destructive narratives.
“The child that looks like me coming up, who thinks they can’t be anything but what they see in a rap video—I want them to see that they can save their community.”
A Living Monument to Redemption
Today, the building at 444 North Main Street is more than brick and mortar. It is a living monument to accountability, second chances, and community restoration. Amar Skinner’s journey—from incarceration to entrepreneurship to education—proves that transformation is possible, and that purpose can rise from even the darkest chapters.
In Suffolk, a former inmate has created a museum not just about prison—but about freedom.
