In Crisis?

Our Blog

33rd Annual Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Breakfast – Where Do We Go from Here: Chaos or Community? – Monday, January 18, 2021

Click here to download .pdf of the program

On Monday, January 18, 2021 the Crispus Attucks Community Center and Community Action Partnership of Lancaster County held the 33rd Annual Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Breakfast to honor the legacy of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. virtually

“It’s important to celebrate because it’s a reminder that we’re required to do something, so what we really need to be paying attention to while this is a day that we bring honor to his work,” said Vanessa Philbert, CEO of Community Action Partnership.

In the Media

Where Do We Go From Here: Chaos or Community? In Context

The theme of our program today is “Where Do We Go from Here: Chaos or Community?” This is the title of Dr. King’s fourth and final book, published less than a year before his assassination. In this work, written in isolation in a rented house in Jamaica, Dr. King analyzes American race relations and outlines his dreams for America’s future, including better jobs, higher wages, decent housing and quality education.

We share these dreams of Dr. King and know we have a long way to go to fulfill them in a way that is equitable to all our neighbors. We are inspired by Dr. King’s words as we move forward with the work of creating a community where we all can prosper:

  • We will be greatly misled if we feel that the problem [of racial injustice] will work itself out. Structures of evil do not crumble by passive waiting. If history teaches anything, it is that evil is recalcitrant and determined, and never voluntarily relinquishes its hold short of an almost fanatical resistance.
  • A society is always eager to cover misdeeds with a cloak of forgetfulness, but no society can fully repress an ugly past when the ravages persist into the present.
  • We are now faced with the fact that tomorrow is today. We are confronted with the fierce urgency of now.
  • With every ounce of our energy we must continue to rid our nation of the incubus of racial injustice.
  • When evil men conspire to preserve an unjust status quo, good men must unite to bring about the birth of a society undergirded by justice.
  • Life’s piano can only produce the melodies of brotherhood when it is recognized that the black keys are as basic, necessary and beautiful as the white keys.
  • Darkness cannot drive out darkness: only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out hate: only love can do that.

Ruby Payne Cook & Essence of Humanity Award Recipients 

ESSENCE OF HUMANITY AWARDS

The Essence of Humanity Award is intended to recognize those individuals who – beyond the requirements of their work – demonstrate remarkable courage, love, strength, determination, encouragement, inspiration, and persistence when dealing with adversity, and to recognize those who demonstrate the spirit of caring and provide inspiration to such individuals on a daily basis. This award is made possible by the High Foundation.

KYONNA BOWMAN

Kyonna Bowman believes that it’s important to lift others as we climb. As the Executive Director of The Mix at Arbor Place, she stewards opportunities for youth in our community and helps people overcome obstacles, something she keenly understands. Kyonna became a mother at 16, which she credits with teaching her many life and leadership experiences. “Although it was one of the hardest experiences that I had to navigate through, it taught me things about myself that I don’t think I would have learned otherwise” – including bravery, resiliency, courage and the ability to truly care for others. “It also showed me that we can turn our own adversity into the power of owning our future,” Kyonna says.

In nominating Kyonna for this prestigious award, Josh Hunter wrote: “Kyonna played a very influential role in my life while I was under her leadership during my time as a summer counselor at Crispus Attucks Community Center. I was pushed to walk in excellence by finding my passion, and Kyonna helped shaped what that looked like by making us pay attention to detail, operating in timeliness, accomplishing goals and bringing them to completion, and taking ownership of results. She has embodied what leadership is by holding herself accountable first.”

Kyonna’s personal values include faith, family, purpose, and perseverance, and she hopes to leave a legacy of loving and leading well. “I hope to invest my life in such a way that the people behind me are better and closer to God because I was there,” she says.

RACHEL FARMER

Rachel Farmer is on the front lines of the coronavirus pandemic. As the Unit Clerk in the Trauma Neurosurgical Unit at Penn Medicine Lancaster General Health, Rachel says she discovers God in each of the stories she hears. Rachel was born in Brooklyn, NY, and came to Lancaster in 1979. The daughter of a single mother – who Rachel credits as her role model – she grew up poor, remembering some nights when dinner would be biscuits with syrup, a few beans, and strawberry Nestle Quik. Of her mother, who is the daughter of sharecroppers from rural Alabama, Rachel says, “She has lived in obscurity most of her life. She never became famous or rich. But she strived to always do the right thing. To be kind, to help those in need, to sing to the glory of her God, and to protect her girls from all of the evils of this world.”

A former Ms. Crispus Attucks pageant participant, Rachel participated in fundraising concerts for Crispus Attucks in 2019, where she lent her beautiful singing voice to the cause. She recently earned her Master’s in Divinity from Lancaster Theological Seminary.

In her nomination, Alisa Bair wrote of Rachel, “She loves deeply and prays passionately. Her very life is a gift to others, even as she struggles to stay healthy, make a living, and find time to be true to her calling to sing, perform and preach. She lets you see it all – the struggles, the overcoming, the love, the gratitude, the persistence, and her childlike joy of living.”


RUBY PAYNE COOK AWARDS

Ruby M. Payne Cook served for nearly 30 years as the first Executive Director of Crispus Attucks Community Center. This award was established in memory of her commitment and dedication to the Center and the African American community. It is given annually to those who have dedicated their time and energy to serving the Center and the surrounding community. 

PATRICIA SHORT

Dr. King said, “life’s most persistent and urgent question is, what are you doing for others?” Some days the work is heavy and exhausting, and still Patricia Short shows up three days a week ready to serve others. Patricia is receiving this award because of her commitment not only to the center but also to the community. Patricia’s days aren’t over when she leaves the center; she is often caring for others by delivering meals, supplies and lending a helping hand or listening ear to those in need. Even in the midst of her own storms, she consistently shows up, putting others needs before her own. She brings wisdom, makes our guests feel loved, and encourages and inspires others to simply show up. You can always hear her asking, “What do you need?” It is these selfless acts that remind us of how much we can do together.

VIOLA THOMAS

Walking into the Food Bank at Crispus Attucks, you’ve likely been blessed with the humor and warm smile of Viola Thomas. Dr. King said, “To serve, you only need a heart full of grace and a soul generated by love.” For nearly six years, Viola has welcomed more than 21,000 customers to the Food Bank where her heart of gold and her love has been extended every time she registers a guest to enter the center food market. When Thomas is not registering and greeting guests at the registration table, she is helping place fresh fruit out on the tables or in boxes, touching more than 10,000 pounds of food each week and ensuring that every family receives a complete box. The work has been heavy, especially now as the Food Bank has seen a significant increase in numbers, but Viola remains patient, kind and gentle with everyone who walks through the doors, even when reminding guests “Masks up, 6ft please.”

These are the hands that make this work possible, and we are forever grateful.

MARTIN LUTHER KING, JR. MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP FUND

In 1982, one J.P. McCaskey High School graduating senior who had also attended Martin Luther King Jr. Elementary School was awarded a $500 postsecondary educational scholarship. It was the first and only award presented that year by King Elementary teachers; they had just begun to operate and fund a scholarship program for their former students at the urging of Principal Ray Smith.

What launched in 1982 expanded into a robust community-fueled organization that, in 2020, awarded scholarships totaling $175,000 to 29 seniors from throughout the School District of Lancaster. The tradition continues in 2021, the 40th year the community scholarship program will invest in the future of the city’s graduating high schoolers. Overall, the enduring commitment of volunteer organizers, supporters and donors has generated nearly $1 million in scholarship money for 411 McCaskey seniors since 1982.

The organization is about “empowering students to fulfill (King’s) dream,’’ according to the website, mlkjrfund.org. It provides scholarships for McCaskey graduating seniors “who have been accepted to an accredited higher education program and have demonstrated financial need” and who “reflect Dr. King’s ideals of commitment to school, community, family, and faith.” Applications for 2021 scholarships are available at mlkjrfund.org today through April 9.

We invite you to join us in helping to foster a vibrant, diverse and prosperous community, rich with cultural heritage and educational opportunities, by making a gift to Crispus Attucks Community Center.

Your gift will help CACC improve the quality of life for youth and families in Lancaster by providing services that promote community prosperity and physical and mental health, and by offering programs and cultural events which preserve the African American heritage. Click here to donate.


About Crispus Attucks Community Center

Since 1927, the Crispus Attucks Community Center has been an anchor in Southeast Lancaster City. The organization has a proud history of providing educational and cultural programs to celebrate African American heritage, serving meals to individuals in need, and focusing on youth education and leadership development.  Crispus Attucks takes immense pride in its mission to improve the quality of life for youth and families in Lancaster by providing services that promote community prosperity, physical and mental health, and by offering programs and cultural events which preserve the African American heritage.

About the Community Action Partnership (CAP) of Lancaster County 

The Community Action Partnership is Lancaster County’s largest anti-poverty organization, helping low income families move toward self-sufficiency. CAP’s service profile interrupts inter-generational poverty with programs that support families and individuals at every age and place in life, in the areas of education and child development, health and nutrition, household stability and safety and empowerment. For more information, visit www.caplanc.org.