Nine city youth activists were honored at the Reggie Lewis Track and
Athletic Center in Roxbury on Monday morning as part of the second
annual Martin Luther King Jr. Day brunch hosted by local nonprofit
Youth Enrichment Services (YES).
The activists were
nominated for recognition at the “Going to the Mountain Top” brunch by
a variety of community organizations for their leadership, character
and service to the city.
According to Peter R. Haffenreffer, chairman of YES’ board of
directors, the brunch was created to address what the organization saw
as a lack of events celebrating up-and-coming youth leaders who are
actively living Dr. King’s dream. And it was about time, Haffenreffer
said, to pay tribute to those teens making a positive impact.
Oscar Brazoban, 16, was nominated by the Hyde Square Task Force for his
work with elementary school students as a summer counselor and his help
running campaigns to improve his community.
“I am happy about this opportunity to be recognized,” said Brazoban,
“because there aren’t a lot of people talking about good teenagers in
the city,”
Another honoree, 18-year-old Irene Jor, said she was happy to be a
“voice for the voiceless,” both in Boston and abroad.
As a senior at the Academy of the Pacific Rim Charter School in Hyde
Park, Jor has traveled to South Africa, Mozambique and Namibia to do
community service. She is also a peer educator and mentor through
Safety, Trust and Relationships (STAR), a teen-dating violence
prevention program at Casa Myrna Vasquez, the state’s largest provider
of domestic violence services to victims of abuse and their children.
YES has a long track record of encouraging Boston youth to make
positive choices. The nonprofit organization was founded in 1968 by the
late Richard Williams, who felt inspired by Dr. King’s call to action
after a meeting with the civil rights leader. In the four decades
since, YES has offered over 125,000 low- and moderate-income
Boston-area kids the opportunity to participate in outdoor and
practical learning activities, such as skiing in the winter and
backpacking in the Berkshires during the summer.
Kai Palmer-Dunning, 16, a youth honoree and active YES member, joined
the organization three years ago. He said that while he loves being a
part of YES for the opportunities it affords him to engage in
activities like downhill snowboarding, he also appreciates the life
skills he has learned — skills that he believes will serve him well
into adulthood.
“I was shy at first,” he said. “But now, I think I am more opening to people. I am better at learning in school.”
Shawn Moore, 16, and Elizabeth Wu, 18, are junior volunteers who teach
other YES participants how to ski. They agreed that the agency provides
opportunities for youth to grow into leaders.
“Through YES, I get to meet cool people I will keep in touch with for
the rest of my life,” Moore said. “The program is also great because we
live in the city, and a lot of kids like us don’t get the opportunity
to do things like this.”
The brunch’s keynote speaker, Ron Bell, director of the Commonwealth’s
Office of Civic Engagement Office, encouraged the assembled youth to
continue keeping Dr. King’s dream alive.
“[YES President] Mary Williams and the people at YES are doing the
programs Governor [Deval] Patrick and I support,” said Bell. “You all
are real models, not role models because you all are setting realistic,
positive changes in our community. Dr. King would be proud.”