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By R. Maria Wright
The Grady Homes Project was begun about two and a half years ago
during the crisis of Atlantas missing and murdered children. Mrs. Susie
LaBord, president of the Grady Homes Tenant Association, was asked by Bob Bevis
of the Joint Urban Ministries in Atlanta to participate in an ecumenical church
cluster group.
The cluster focused on the missing and murdered children case by
gathering information relevant to the incidents, implementing block parenting
and working closely with Atlanta law enforcement officials.
Members of the group included St. Andrews Presbyterian
Church, Atlanta Friends (Quaker House), Big Bethel A.M.E. Church, Ebenezer
Baptist Church, Liberty Baptist Church and Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Church.
Representatives from these congregations clustered
around the Grady Homes community, meeting once a week to discuss ways of
solving the problem of the missing and murdered children, attending workshops,
and compiling information. The group also sought ways to engage neighborhood
youth in meaningful activities which would keep them close to home while the
murders continued to take place.
I believe to this day, said Mrs. LaBord, the
prayer of these church cluster groups all around the city of Atlanta did more
to end the crisis of the missing and murdered children than anything.
When the crisis ended, the church cluster group, because of the
love and togetherness which had been fostered in working so closely on the
issue, decided not to disband.
Mrs. LaBord, Ed Scroggins, director of the Grady Homes Youth
Center, Sister Linda Maser, pastoral assistant at Our Lady of Lourdes and
Father Frank Giusta, pastor of Our Lady of Lourdes, are some of the harvesters
of good will who continue to keep the Grady Homes Project going.
In March of this year, when both the Girls and Boys Clubs in the
area were closed, the Grady Homes Youth Center felt the impact. Officials at
the center struggled to keep it open for young people, aged six through 16,
despite the increased demands placed upon it.
They say it couldnt be done, Susie LaBord
remembered. There was much work to be done equipment had to be
bought, the center needed painting. Some of the churches used their Sunday
bulletins to make appeals. No one felt we could re-open the center in time
because there just was no money.
Mrs. LaBord finally took to the airwaves and made a television
appeal. I asked for help from the public, she said. The
public gave it to me.
This summer, the centers activities for young people
included Vacation Bible School at Big Bethel and Ebenezer, arts and crafts at
St. Andrews and the use of Ebenezers bus to transport children to
various locations around the city. There was swimming at the Martin Luther King
Center, dance classes and weekly lunches for 150 children provided alternately
by cluster member churches. The center currently maintains an after-school
program with hours from 2:30-6 p.m.
I believe that children in the developing stage should learn
as well as play. A program that benefits them where they are is essential. The
total child should be developed, said center director Ed Scroggins, a
Morehouse College graduate with an interest in athletics and youth.
When he thinks of measuring results of the work he and others have
done in Grady Homes, Scroggins says he can tell the difference in the respect
he receives when walking through the project, or perhaps when a youth who grew
up in Grady Homes later returns to bring his children to the youth center.
Sister Linda Maser of Our Lady of Lourdes is optimistic about the
future of the Grady Homes Project. I would hope for ongoing
development, she said. The advantages of working with a cluster is
that people from many backgrounds come together to work toward a common
goal.
At Grady Homes, Sister Linda said, the cluster group strives to
meet the needs of the community as they arise. Those interested in volunteer
work with the project attend cluster meetings the second Thursday of each month
at 6 p.m. in the Jackson Room of the administration building at 148 Bell
Street.
There still exists a need for arts and crafts supplies, furniture,
games, a ping pong table and horseshoe sets to help keep the center going.
Anything that is done to help the children of Grady Homes is always appreciated
by center workers.
Susie LaBord, whose long career of civic service spans more than
three decades, said gratefully, I would like to thank all the churches of
the cluster for their work in helping these kids we serve at the Grady Homes
Youth Center and all the volunteers who give of their time and service to make
this project work.
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