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Opinion dimond CLUBS GIVE ANY KID CHANCE TO BE GREAT |
Saturday, April 23, 2011
Clubs Give Any Kid Chance To Be Great
By Diane Dimond
So often in this space I write about terrible things being done to — and sometimes by — the children of America. From sex trafficking to bullying, it is easy for a crime and justice writer to get mired in the all the negative surrounding our kids.
This time let's concentrate on the positive.
Any child psychologist will tell you that young people crave attention, structure and discipline. Any cop on the beat will tell you there are plenty of kids who just don't get it at home.
Their parents are either too busy working to pay the bills or their parents can't pass it on because they never got it themselves.
The Boys and Girls Clubs of America are here to fill the gap.
You can find a club in all 50 states. At last count they serve about 4 million kids in big cities and small towns at dedicated Boys and Girls Club buildings or places like schools, on Native American lands and at military bases.
I recently got involved in this wonderful organization and realized that what they do goes a tremendously long way to keep kids on the right path, away from the criminal element and focused on hope for their futures.
About 65 percent of the Club's members are from minority families; 47 percent come from single-parent households. The majority of members are boys, but 45 percent are girls.
Club staff members check each child's report card every quarter, and when they see trouble a special after-school tutoring squad steps in.
A certain grade level must be maintained before the child can be a member of the basketball, baseball, aquatic, karate or other athletic team. If a child is hungry, he or she is fed a hot meal; if an older member needs help for college, the Club steps up to try to attract scholarships.
If the child has a unique challenge — for example, I met one young Club graduate who had suffered with a terrible stutter at one point — the Club offers encouragement and puts out the call to its web of volunteers to get needed help.
If a family is unable to pay the nominal annual dues — $30 a year per child in Albuquerque — the Club will look for a way to subsidize them.
The Boys and Girls Clubs of America make such a lifelong impression on these kids that a huge proportion of the 54,000 trained professional staffers nationwide were once Club members themselves.
Once a member, always a member.
During my visit to one of the most celebrated clubs — the Kip's Bay Club in the Bronx, N.Y. — beaming staff member Dwayne Lindo reminded me that singer/actress Jennifer Lopez got her start right there as part of the club's renowned performing arts program.
Lopez is still involved in the organization as one of their national spokespeople.
Two-time Academy Award-winning actor Denzel Washington is also a New York Club alumnus.
"The Club is where I looked for hope, purpose and direction," Washington says today. "That's where I learned to dream — and to think big."
Other now famous Boys and Girls Club members include: Gen. Wesley Clark, who joined a Club in Little Rock, Ark., as a boy and rose to become a four-star general and NATO Supreme Allied Commander in Europe; former Secretary of the Interior and former New Mexico Rep. Manuel Lujan, who joined the Club started by his father in Santa Fe; Shaquille O'Neal, who says he honed his basketball skills at a Club in Newark, N.J., and has donated $1 million to build technology centers for the kids; actor Martin Sheen, who says he and six brothers practically grew up at the club in Dayton, Ohio, back in the '40s and '50s; and Jackie Joyner-Kersee, considered one of the greatest female athletes of the 20th century, who was not only a member of a Boys and Girls Club in rough-and-tumble East St. Louis, Ill., but she later opened another Club there.
Joyner-Kersee says the organization helped keep her from taking the wrong path in life and kept her focused on developing her potential.
Many former members are active in fundraising, which is where most of the Club's money comes from. The weakened economy has meant some funds have dried up, but Staples donates school supplies to the tutoring programs, and Microsoft and IBM give computers and keep them running. Coca-Cola sponsors nutrition programs, and JC Penney generates millions of dollars for the Clubs by urging customers to "round up" their bill at checkout. Bank of America helps Clubs feed hungry children.
This isn't a solicitation for money, although I can't think of a more worthwhile cause.
The organization's motto is: "Boys & Girls Clubs believe every child has the potential to BE GREAT. Clubs strive to build caring, responsible citizens, to create a positive place full of hope and opportunity for every child."
Sounds great to me, and I wanted you to know. It's programs like these that can break the cycle of young people turning to crime.
www.DianeDimond.net — email to Diane@DianeDimond.net
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