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Black Collegian News & Views
Students Find Summer Mission in Dallas
By Tiesha Henderson, Black College Wire
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Photo credit: El Centro College
The day camp at the Salvation Army's Cedar Crest Corps in Dallas
welcomed 15 to 18 Oakwood College volunteers this summer. |
Nicole Brown, a sophomore at historically black Oakwood College in
Huntsville, Ala., has taken a year off from coursework and says the
experience has changed her life.
She has spent the year as a volunteer with an organization called the
National Association for the Prevention of Starvation, most recently
helping children in needy neighborhoods in Dallas.
"Summer breaks and Christmas breaks are not enough for me," she said.
"I just see so many people that need to be encouraged. So many people's
lives need to be changed and I can do so much within one year.
"This has been the best year of my life," Brown continued. "I've
never been so happy. I've never had so much joy."
NAPS is a nonprofit organization founded in 1978 at Oakwood College.
Through feeding programs, advocacy and mentoring, young adult members
try to address children's hunger on many levels. One goal is to
encourage the children to see education as a way up and out of poverty.
In Dallas, the students saw an opportunity: More than 99,000 Dallas
children face problems linked to being poor, including low school
performance, teenage pregnancy and juvenile crime, according to Frances
Deviney, Texas director of
Kids Count, a national program that tracks the status of children.
"It is only by government and communities coming together that we can
hope to pull families and children out of poverty," Deviney said. "One
without the other cannot do it alone."
More than 30 percent of all Dallas children under 18 live in poverty,
according to the U.S. Census Bureau's American Community Survey,
compiled in 2004, the most recent information available.
"What is particularly concerning about these data is the fact that so
many other indicators of child welfare are strongly associated with
poverty: infant mortality, school performance, teen birth, juvenile
violent crime," Deviney said. "Unless we combat the underlying problem
of child poverty, children will continue to struggle in those related
areas for the foreseeable future."
Volunteers from Oakwood and NAPS traveled almost 700 miles in four
passenger vans to Dallas this summer after seeing a story on CNN.
"We were looking at the news and we saw the Dallas Independent School
District and the violence going on in the school system," said Francisco
Cross, the association's missions director. "So what better place and
time to help these young people, who in most cases come from broken
families with no father figure or no mother figure?"
Oakwood is affiliated with the Seventh-Day Adventist Church. Although
NAPS is headquartered on Oakwood's campus, the association has no
affiliation with the school or any religious association. However, many
of its members are Oakwood students.
In Dallas, NAPS volunteers work with a day camp at the Salvation
Army's Cedar Crest Corps. They are coordinating service efforts with
several South Oak Cliff schools, including Roosevelt and South Oak Cliff
high schools.
"It's been a blessing. They're great kids," said Rodney Hinkle, the
corps administrator of the Salvation Army center. "You always hear
negative things about our youth, but these 15 to 18 students have been
nothing but a positive and good influence to not only our kids, but the
seniors that we have in our senior program."
After he became director of the center in September, Hinkle said, one
of his goals was to increase enrollment in its summer day camp. It has
grown from eight students last year to more than 30. He attributed this
to a decision to lower the price of the camp to $30 per week, and to the
help the program receives from its NAPS volunteers.
Through its feeding, educational, medical and building programs, the
organization has completed missions around the world, with chapters in
India, Zambia, Madagascar, Jamaica and other countries.
Children's program director Julie-Anne "Jewel" Satterfield said the
group was supposed to return to India this summer to work at a school
built to serve Indian descendants of African slaves. However, the plans
fell through and NAPS remained stateside, dividing its energies between
Hurricane Katrina relief efforts in Lake Charles, La., and young people
in Dallas.
"We said, 'Hey, the Lord closed these doors, but there's work that
needs to be done right here in our backyard," said Satterfield, a 2005
Oakwood graduate who now works full-time with NAPS.
At the Dallas day camp, Satterfield said, the volunteers teach about
being good citizens; respecting parents, elders and teachers; and the
importance of teamwork.
"We teach them about moral issues, about the Bible," she said. "We
try to show them that we love them and we care about them."
Deviney, the Texas Kids Count director, said there might be
additional benefits. "Hopefully these students will be an inspiration to
local kids their age who want to help, but maybe don't know how," she
said. "I think it is wonderful when communities come together, even from
across state lines, to help one another."
Run primarily by students, NAPS is financially supported by donations
collected during spring, Thanksgiving, Christmas and summer breaks. The
students solicit through their Web site, and they canvass neighborhoods
and downtown areas telling people about their work.
During a neighborhood visit in Dallas, the group met some girls who
also had begun to help with the day camp. LaKeydra Deckard, an eighth
grader at O. W. Holmes Middle School, dreams of becoming a pediatrician.
Working with NAPS students and with the younger children has "been
great," she said. "You love them and you care for them and treat them
like they're your kids."
"One of our mottos is 'Children helping children,'" said Cross, the
NAPS missions director and a Yuba City, Calif., native. He wants their
efforts, especially their outreach to youth, to lead to a decrease in
Dallas' teen pregnancy and violence statistics.
"We're hoping that we can meet with the mayor," he said. "Hopefully,
we can let the whole city know that we're here and we care."
Some of the volunteers will stay in Dallas. Brown said she will
return to college when she finishes up her year. She was attracted to
the program when she saw a video about its mission trips. "Then I found
out that NAPS even goes out into the schools and into the streets and
that really caught my attention because my heart is in the streets," she
said. "I used to be out there doing stuff that most young people do."
Although the work NAPS does is unpaid, Cross said, it is worth the
sacrifice. In addition to providing the supplies and educational
programs, they've been able to give something extra.
"The greatest thing that you can show people is love," he said. "And
love is revealed when people make sacrifices. That's just what we do --
show love."
Tiesha Henderson is a Black College Wire summer
intern at the Dallas Examiner. Portions of her story first appeared in
the Dallas Examiner.
Posted Aug. 2, 2006 |