Thursday, December 20, 2007

Save the Date - SGM Winter Open House

Save the Date!

We invite you to our next

Winter Open House

We would love for you to attend either:
Sunday afternoon, Feb. 24, 2008 or
Monday lunchtime, Feb. 25, 2008

Come to learn more about our program offerings and
the Woodlawn neighborhood we call home.

A light, catered lunch will be served.
A historic bus tour of Woodlawn will also be offered.

Questions or comments? Contact:
Lauren Dillon
773.493.0656 ext. 1003
Look for more details to follow in the New Year!

Semester Wrap-Up

Today was the last day Chicago Public School ran until the New Year. Just as the schools are wrapping up for the Christmas holiday so, also, are our youth programs.



Last week, our technology program for high school students in small computer networking ended. This apprenticeship program is sponsored by After School Matters. Over 20 students graduated from this semester's apprenticeship. They finished up strong, celebrating their efforts with a final party and small award ceremony! Even as I write, students are knocking on our door, eager to pick-up their payment checks.



Staff and tutors of our Club 2-5-2 after-school tutoring program created an incentive system at the beginning of the year. The incentive program rewarded student's good behavior and improved academic performance while also teaching them the basics of money management. The Sunshine Community Bank was established :smile: to hold the student's Sunshine Bucks. Each child had to read the Bank's service brochure to learn about the bank's provisions. (Fake) checks were issued for students to use in their depositing and withdrawal of monies.

Toys and clothes that remained from our community-wide Christmas Store were used to establish Club 2-5-2's Store where students could spend their Sunshine Bucks to "purchase" Christmas gifts for themselves and for their family. The Store was used to teach students about money saving and spending. We trust from the smiles on their faces that they also had fun.

Lastly, as in past years, Sunshine youth were treated to the excitements of Chicago's Navy Pier Winter Wonderfest. This was another reward for faithful attendance and for commitment to learning.

Chicagoland Churches and Woodlawn Families Participate in annual Christmas Store

This Saturday Sunshine held its 4th Annual Christmas Store in the multi-purpose room of our 61st Street office. It's become a holiday tradition for Sunshine to hold a Christmas Store whereby, brand-new gifts donated by friends at partnering churches are sold to parents in the community at a discounted price. This year we specifically priced items at 25 cents to the retail dollar. The money raised in contribution dollars and sales from the Store are used to support the needs of community members with particularly acute financial needs this Christmas. Churches contribute gifts, neighbors shop, and fellow neighbors benefit.

The Store marked a milestone for us. Last year's Store was held in our office building but, we weren't formally moved into the facility, none of our furniture was in the space and the Store, then, was held in the smaller office-specific space. Our basement office on 62nd Street didn't allow us the same kind of presence that we have today with floor-ceiling windows fronting the building.




Our windows are only an aesthetic marking of a much greater reality - the reality that our new facility has given us a space to build more as well as deepen relationships with Woodlawn community members. Last year, 35 families were invited to our Store. This year we were able to host (and therefore invite) 80 families. The Store was open for a duration of five hours (the later hour and a half the Store was opened to the general public.)

What has come out of the Store is only a great testament to the Lord's faithful working through Sunshine, through community members, and through members of contributing churches (perhaps yourself).
  • Ten churches gave gifts to make this Store possible.
  • 435 toys were given. (A number which doesn't include the number of clothes contributed.)
  • Nearly $3,000 is cash contributions were given towards buying additional gifts, wrapping paper and tape, as well as gift cards to local grocery store given free to shoppers to use toward their holiday meal expenses.
  • Nearly $1,400 was raised through the sale of goods. This amount, combined with remaining contribution money, will be given back to community families this New Year.
  • The day of, over 50 families shopped our Store.







On behalf of Sunshine and families in Woodlawn blessed by the Store, thank you
to all of those within our neighborhood and our church friends who once again made
the Christmas Store possible!

"In My World"

As I believe I mentioned before, part of our after school program - called Club 2-5-2 - is dedicated to teaching students about world changers and scholars throughout time. Figures like Moses, Rosa Parks, Martin Luther King Jr. Intregal to this teaching is talking about and pointing out how our young people (ages 2nd through 5th grade) can be world changers.

Last week one of our 5th grade students brought us a poem he'd written in school. This is the evidence of a young world changer.

“In My World”
In my world, you got to stay strong
In my world, a lot of things are going on
Killing, murdering, I hear it all the time.
People who do it, they get away by lying
Drinking and smoking, some people think its cool.
That stuff is not really good for you.
Don’t take drugs, that will mess up your life.
Being on the streets, you might lose your life.
This is all I’m sayin…Get an education or you’ll be on your knees prayin’.

Tuesday, December 4, 2007

"Nothing Happens Without Reverberation"

Dawn Trice, Chicago Tribune reporter, has well-stated a truth Woodlawn residents have known for awhile and wish others understood too - "Nothing happens without reverberation". Murder is no exception. I am apt to say the attention Woodlawn has received around the shooting of University of Chicago student, Amadou Cisse, has enlivened the conversation about urban violence on the South Side of the city. But, the truth is, the conversation has been a lively in our community for some time now. But for certain reasons, better-expressed in Trice's piece, there still exists a grave discrepancy - an injustice in most classic of terms - in how and when the news media points its spotlight. Wails of grief cut equally as deep, are equally as tragic, and are equally as loud when one of our resident youth is killed. Even more, for area residents each new wave of grief is coupled with not-too-distant memories of a thriving Woodlawn...

Trice met with long-time, local area residents at the Sunshine office. This is the Tribune report:

(Unfortunately, Dawn Trice got the name of our organization wrong. "Sunrise" Ministries is, indeed, us.)