Monday, January 18, 2010

Round 3, Part 1: Tougaloo College

Wow! 2 posts in 2 days?! Unheard of!

For Round 3, my team will be working on 2 different projects. The first couple of weeks (i.e. right now), we're living on campus in Vicksburg and working with Tougaloo College and the Rainbow Garden, just north of Jackson. Tougaloo was founded in 1869 by the American Missionary Association, an abolitionist group committed to educating freed slaves. It is now one of 4 historically black colleges in Mississippi and is currently home to about 1000 liberal arts students. Tougaloo has a very impressive list of alumni and associations and was highly involved in the civil rights movement of the 1960s in Jackson. They helped stage th
e Woolworth lunch counter sit-in that eventually integrated it. It's said that about 50% of the black doctors, lawyers, etc. in Mississippi have come through Tougaloo. Since May 2008, there's been a sustainable garden on Tougaloo's campus as part of a partnership with the Rainbow Natural Grocery/Whole Foods Co-Op, a really cool natural/organic food store in Jackson. We'll be spending about half of our time at Tougaloo working in the garden and on the nature trail that's connected of it and half working with the facilities department helping rehab some of the buildings. I'm really enjoying it so far.


the sign at the head of our nature trail


walking the trail after we cut it


Today was the MLK National Day of Service. Katie, one of our amazing projects STLs, set up a great project for the 2 teams on campus (mine and Jo's) and some of the staff members at Initiative, Inc, a local low-income housing complex that helps its tenant-families get an education and increase their life skills so that they can be self-sufficient at the end of a 2-3 year period. We worked with the Mayor of Vicksburg to invite the city to make it "a day on, not a day off" and we were blessed with a lot of volunteers who came out and worked with us. We did various projects around the Initiative--painting, gardening, putting house numbers on mailboxes and curbs, childcare, debris removal, etc. It was a really great day and we all left feeling very fulfilled. The executive director of the Initiative cried during her reflection piece at the end of the day because she was so grateful for our work and how the city had shown her that they really did care for this little non-profit.

Did any of you volunteer for MLK day? What did you do? I wanna hear about it!


Back to Tougaloo tomorrow morning and then Miami next week to start with Habitat for Miami!


Thanks for sticking with me through my long absence and please drop me a quick hello in the comments! I need to know there's life outside the AmeriBubble!

XO

1 comment:

  1. Nora -- we are so proud of you! sounds like you are doing just great! It was wonderful to see you on New Years Day and hear all about your adventures and accomplishments! Much love!

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