“An individual has not started living until he can rise above the narrow confines of his individualistic concerns to the broader concerns of all humanity.”
-Martin Luther King Jr.
Martin Luther King’s Day has been nationally recognized as a call to service day. Yesterday, hundreds of you in Harlem youth volunteered and gathered to think about Martin Luther King’s message of nonviolence and social change. Eight of our Youth Court members attending the MLK Youth For Change Summit sponsored by City Year and Melissa Mark Viverito's Youth Violence Task Force, at Public School 96 in East Harlem to learn lessons on how we can practice nonviolence in Harlem. To learn more about MLK activities held in Harlem read the DNA info article here.
Martin Luther King’s Day has been nationally recognized as a call to service day. Yesterday, hundreds of you in Harlem youth volunteered and gathered to think about Martin Luther King’s message of nonviolence and social change. Eight of our Youth Court members attending the MLK Youth For Change Summit sponsored by City Year and Melissa Mark Viverito's Youth Violence Task Force, at Public School 96 in East Harlem to learn lessons on how we can practice nonviolence in Harlem. To learn more about MLK activities held in Harlem read the DNA info article here.
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