Monday, April 8, 2013

Building up the Joven Noble (Noble Youth) in Maryland

Building Up the Joven Noble in Maryland

Joven Noble training was provided to three major components of Montgomery County's Positive Youth Development Initiative that provides prevention and intervention services to high risk and gang involved youth. The three programs that participated in the training were the following:  

  • The Department of Health and Human Services 

  • Street Outreach Network that engages and provides services to gang involved youth throughout the county.

  • These services are intended to help gang involved youth heal from a life of violence, as well as intervene in cycles of violence that the youth are exposed to.  
  •  The Montgomery County Department of Recreation Sports Academy Program that works in school settings to engage high risk youth in positive youth development programming that focuses on sports programs, but also encompasses academic enrichment, and life skills.

  •  Lastly, the Crossroads and Up County Youth Opportunity Centers managed by Identity Inc., that provides a wide array of healing services to adjudicated and gang involved youth in the county.
Those services include: case management, mental health services, gender specific positive youth development youth groups, leadership development, job development, parental supports, recreational services, and tattoo removal services. The Joven Noble training was sponsored by these three agencies. All three programs stand committed to be a part of the National Compadre Network's mission of addressing the needs of youth of color and look forward to a long term relationship. We especially want to thank Jerry Tello for providing such an amazing, and sacred training as we move forward to implement the strategies taught from the training. 

This training represents a part of the Healing Generations project under NCN's National Boys and Men of Color Network.


-Luis Cardona
Regional representative for NCN and a nationally recognized expert in violence intervention and prevention services. was also provided as part of the Healing Generations project under NCN's National Boys and Men of Color Network.

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Gifts That Keep on Giving: Silver Star Youth Show us How To Support a Community

 "Silver Star Youth Program" shows that Xinachtli Rites of Passage Curriculum Passes with Flying Colors. 

The girls at Rancho Cielo Campus, Silver Star Youth Program are no strangers to helping their community. In February 2013, the girls created 18 scarves and attached an inspirational message for the Women Alive Program, a women's shelter in Salinas, CA. The scarf-making was incorporated in the Xinachtli Rites of Passage Curriculum.


Rancho Cielo is a 100-acre ranch in the foothills of Salinas, with an educational component, vocational training, and recreation for at-risk youth and first-time youth offenders giving them an opportunity to redirect their lives. Although our first students arrived on campus in 2004, the program has already demonstrated success, as measured by a 73% recidivism reduction rate.

Rancho Cielo has been incorporating the La Cultura Curriculums since 2011, including Joven Noble, young men's curriculum. Congratulations! 








Una Sangre y Un Amor (One Blood, One Love)

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Una Sangre y Un Amor (One Blood, One Love)
Reflective thoughts on the National Compadres Network Gathering of Elders
By Deen Tyler
A few months back I sat in a meeting at The California Endowment whose purpose was to build bridges across the various communities of color. Among those communities represented were the African, Native, and Latino. This was the preliminary conversation that would ultimately result in this past weekend’s two-day retreat at which seven representatives across three generations from the aforementioned communities came together to begin the process of forming a collective agenda and action plan geared towards building unity amongst people of color and acquiring power as a collective. With the vision of Baba Arnold Perkins and Maestro Jerry Tello and the support of The California Endowment, specifically Sandra Davis, Sandra Witt, and Lauren Valverde, what started as an ambitious yet commonly sensible idea came to fruition.
We sat in a circle that enclosed an altar containing items from the various cultures and experiences represented in the room. There was a wooden talking stick, actually a branch that survived a severe fire, being passed around as we each introduced ourselves and described what we felt about the convening as sage smoke sat motionless in mid-air.
 After lunch, each community gave a presentation on its history and culture taking feedback and questions at the end from the others. Though time and flow limited the equity in this process, it did ignite inclusive dialogue around often avoided truths as each community discussed the misconceptions, mis-education, misunderstandings that it held against the other communities. This dynamic was explored through the lens of the incarcerated, which provided a different context. The bonds and disconnections between the various peoples of color, accessorized with historical social and domestic misinformation and trauma were a recurring theme throughout the weekend. The day ended with a powerful drumming circle, a concert of the three sounds and rhythms of the respective communities.

On the second day, there was an obvious air of anxious energy around the next steps filling the room. The sense was that there was more building required internally before this circle could move towards a solid collective action step. There were several partnership and collaborative opportunities that came up including; 1) bridge building between Building Healthy Community sites i.e. Sacramento & Stockton, Oakland & Richmond, etc. 2) one similar retreat per six months with the next one being held in Oakland 3) formation of an advisory committee within the circle and 4) collaborative efforts on the upcoming Boys and Men of Color Summer Camp.
As you can imagine, if I could only scratch the surface of the energy, power, and magnitude of the moment, I would consider myself an extraordinary communicator. I think that successfully creating an environment where men from three different generations and cultural communities who know little to nothing about each other can become almost immediately comfortable enough within themselves and with each other to be completely vulnerable and transparent with their own pain, trauma, faults, and truths represents an immeasurable revolutionary milestone. The moment defied all that the world, including those in attendance was/is being taught to believe about masculinity and willingness to expose injury as it relates to men of color.
In all honesty, there were obviously kinks in this process that can and will be ironed out in the future, as most of the kinks were logistical; time and agenda management to be specific. With as much experience, data, technology, and training that medical professionals have with relation to delivering babies, in the moment of labor there are still things that happen which completely conflict with the plan and process. In these moments, it becomes the responsibility of the doctor to adjust accordingly in a manner that is patient, considerate, compassionate, and respectfully delicate with the nature of the process. This retreat delivered a new life into the world. It may very well be a funny looking baby (whom we cannot determine who it resembles) at birth but with the nurturing and cultivation from this community at large, it can certainly grow and develop into the internally and externally beautiful being that many funny looking babies become.
This retreat represented a shift in thinking, functionality, and understanding across four communities and three generations and the potential of a cultural revolution. The sense was that we witnessed something that was difficult to wrap one’s mind and words around but quite naturally wrap one’s spirit around. I was honored and blessed to be present with “All My Relations”.  "Ashe."
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