Friday, December 17, 2010

Church swap discussion at Fred Batts Leadership Luncheon - Monday

Fred Batts Leadership Luncheon – December 20, 2010

I will join Ramona Curtis, Director for Leader Development & Civic Engagement at Baylor University, and Jo Welter, Immediate Past President of the Community Race Relations Coalition, as keynote speakers at the Fred Batts Leadership Luncheon. We will discuss, “A Grassroots Effort to Dismantle the Most Segregated Hour in America" at noon on Monday, December 20, at the Bledsoe Miller Recreation Center, 300 Martin Luther King Blvd.


Curtis hopes to help dismantle what Martin Luther King, Jr. called “America’s most segregated hour” -- the 11 a.m. hour on Sunday morning when people go to church.


“Our world is growing more and more diverse,” Curtis said, “I’ve never understood why we are so segregated during that 11:00 hour on Sunday morning.”


Church Swap participants will document their journeys via video interviews, a personal blog and Facebook posts. They will also read Divided by Faith: Evangelical Religion and the Problem of Race in America and United by Faith: The Multiracial Congregation As an Answer to the Problem of Race.


After two months, they will return to their home church where they will spend another two months writing about what they have learned. Using this information, project managers will produce a research paper, a Web site, a video documentary and a research paper detailing their experiences.


Curtis who grew up in a predominantly black church made the switch several years ago, and she is glad she did.


“I have grown tremendously as person because of my open-mindedness,” she said, “I am challenged to be able to be comfortable and see people as people and not the color of their skin.”


A $10,000 grant from the Kellogg Foundation’s Racial Healing Initiative allowed Curtis and the Community Race Relations Coalition to challenge the segregation stronghold.  Jo Welter, owner of the community Race Coalition, helped secure funding for the project.

 Lunch (optional) will be available for $5.00.The weekly event aims to help Waco residents stay familiar with and abreast of the people and issues that affect  communities.

Tuesday, December 7, 2010

The Waco Chapter of The Links, Inc. Holds Successful Santa’s Workshop

The Waco Chapter of The Links, Inc. Holds Successful Santa’s Workshop


The Waco Chapter of The Links, Inc. held its annual Santa’s workshop Dec. 4 at the Phoenix Ballroom. The event was even more successful this year than ever before with more than 150 participants, including children of all ages and their parents.

Links leaders decided to offer the workshop as an outreach project.

“We did not charge an admission fee this year because we wanted every child in the community to participate,” said Links President Josette Ayres. “Previously we’ve charged more than $25. I thought it was well worth the sacrifice.”

The workshop included refreshments, pictures with Santa, storytelling and crafts. It was funded through generous donations from Wal-Mart, Waco Art Center, Oakbrook Farms, and Mars Chocolate.

“We would not have been able to provide such an elaborate event free to the community without our generous sponsors,” said Sonya Todd, this year’s chair. “Activities included a wonderfully, elaborate gingerbread house, Christmas card making and cup cake decorating.”

The event organizers believe children from all walks of life benefited from the festive occasion.

“It really touched my heart to see the excitement in their faces when they saw rows and rows of gingerbread houses and cupcakes,” said Vashon Sutherland, Waco Links PR chair. “Many said they had never had the opportunity to see a real gingerbread house before. It almost makes you want to cry.”

The Links, Inc. founded in 1946, is one of the oldest and largest volunteer service organizations of women who are committed to enriching, sustaining and ensuring the culture and economic survival of African Americans and other persons of African ancestry.  The Waco Chapter of the Links, Inc, was founded in 1974 and is proud to be a contributing member of the Central Texas community.