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Luz

12/21/2015

 
“I'm from a small town in the Andes Mountains of Peru. Our family grew our own food and raised animals for meat and wool. My grandma took the wool that we sheared from the sheep and llamas, boiled it, dyed it with plants and seeds, and then wove it into clothes and blankets. Her loom was made from two sticks stuck in the ground. I remember her making my pullu, a little wool blanket I wore around my shoulders. I’m so glad I grew up with her. She taught me so much. Grandma spoke only Quechua, which was the original language of the Incas. Most of the older people in the mountains speak it, but the children learn Spanish in school and speak that more. 
 
“My brother was a year old and my mom was eight months pregnant with me when my father died, so we moved in with my grandparents. They lived in a stone house with a thatched roof made from ichu [a grass native to the upper Andes]. We didn’t have electricity until I was about 14; we made our own candles from sheep tallow. My mom tended the cows, goats, sheep, and llamas and took them to different pastures throughout the year, depending on the season. My brother and I went with her when we weren’t in school. We slept in little tents made from sticks and sheets of plastic, and ate barley, potatoes, quinoa, and of course meat from the animals. During the school year when Mom was away with the herds and we were with my grandparents, we sometimes walked four to twelve hours to see her on weekends. She worked very, very hard to have enough money to give us an education.
 
“I finished high school at 16 and moved to Lima to live with an aunt and uncle. My uncle does beautiful work, and he taught me how to make jewelry from silver and stones. When my husband and I moved to the United States, I didn’t have the tools or equipment to do that anymore, but I remembered seeing ornaments in Peru made from the peels of fruit. One day I was eating an orange and thought, Why don’t I try to do something with this? I dried the peel and it worked well, so I began using peels and seeds to create jewelry. Now I use orange, lime, and tangerine peels; cantaloupe seeds; tagua seeds which my uncle sends me from Peru; and vegetable ivory, which is a palm seed that grows in the Peruvian rainforests. Soon I'll be  teaching art to children in a community after-school program, showing them how to make beautiful things from what they can find in nature.
 
“I like Memphis, people are very friendly and I feel like I’m finding my community, but I do miss my home in the mountains. Grandma is in her 90s now and is losing her sight, but she still knits blankets for the beds and makes little things to send to me. Mom still tends her animals. She’s the strongest, toughest, most hard-working woman I know. She taught me that it doesn’t matter how poor we are, we should work hard and be respectful, clean, and organized. She’s an example to me, and I’ll always look back and think about the obstacles she overcame. She taught me everything in life. I love her so much.”
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Photos below courtesy of Luz
Grandma getting the wool ready for spinning
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A typical tent used when taking the animals to pasture. Mom is in the blue sweater.
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Mom singing and playing the tinya (small handmade drum).
She is wearing the poncho that Grandma made.
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Mom and Luz
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Heading into town to buy food
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Luz's home town
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My business is called Sumaq Sairi. Sumaq means ‘beautiful.’ Sairi means ‘novel’ or ‘unique ‘and is a shortened form of the name of the last Inca chief who ruled the area where our family is from. It’s also a short form of my second last name, Sairitupac (my mom’s last name).
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Luz Merissa Vargas
​Etsy Shop:  etsy.com/shop/sumaqsairi
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Jerry

12/20/2015

 
“My mother saw the Wright Brothers---Wilbur and Orville---when they brought their plane to Montgomery, Alabama. She was always crazy about airplanes after that. She lived to her hundredth year. I’m 98 now myself, born on July 28, 1917. I remember my father’s first car, and I remember the school teaching us how to use a dial telephone before we ever got one at home. The most important invention in my lifetime was the television. When my husband and I got our first one, all the neighborhood children wanted to watch it. I told them they could watch it if they’d polish the silver, and they did! [*laughs*] I got my first computer when I was 82 years old, and I thought it was the most fascinating thing. I got married again when I was 82 too. My first husband and I had been good friends with Jack and his wife for over fifty years, so we knew each other very well. We’d both lost our mates, but we stayed friends. When he proposed, I said, ‘People will laugh,’ and he said, ‘People NEED to laugh!’ So I married him, and we had seven years together before he died. If you can find someone as sweet as Jack, I’d advise ANYbody to get married, even if you ARE 82!”
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Francisco

12/19/2015

 
“Our house was full of music when I was growing up. My mother was from Minnesota, and she’d met my father in Quito, Ecuador, where she’d gone to volunteer. They were both very interested in the traditional music of that region, and that’s what brought them together. My father was part of the New Song Movement in Ecuador, which was a lot like the folk song movement in America in the 60’s. It was a form of activism that addressed social and political issues like inequality, injustice, oppression, and war. As part of my father’s expression of solidarity with those who had been marginalized, he built and played traditional instruments. Through that, he demonstrated that the rhythms, tonalities, vocals, and musical interpretations of that culture mattered, and therefore the people mattered. When my parents moved to the States, my father continued to perform Ecuadorian music, and my mother joined him. She teaches a music/culture/Spanish class in an elementary school now, and my father is an artist-in-residence who goes all over the state of Minnesota conducting music and culture workshops with students. Both my parents emphasize that it’s not just about the music; it’s the cultural context and the importance of preserving Latin heritage that drives what they do.
 
“I’ve continued that tradition. I wrote my Musicology dissertation on a genre of music called La Bomba, and as part of the research, I went to Ecuador, to the area where my father grew up. My father is Afro-Ecuadorian, so that music is part of the heritage he and I share.
 
“I teach high school Spanish now, and I’m hoping to incorporate more of the musical and cultural context of the language as time goes on. I’d like to see kids of Hispanic descent valuing their heritage rather than shunning or disregarding it. Being a part of two cultures can enrich their lives and give them a unique perspective that other people don’t necessarily have. It becomes more meaningful as you get older and becomes more important professionally as well. You don’t have to choose the American culture and reject the Hispanic one or choose the Hispanic heritage and reject the American. You are between the two. There is great value in embracing both.”
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Francisco D. Lara, PhD in Musicology from Florida State University
Dissertation:  La Bomba es Vida (La Bomba is Life)
YouTube:  La Bomba music

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Kristen & Family

12/18/2015

 
"Two other moms and I had been involved in community work before we were married, but once we had kids, it was harder to do. There are very few opportunities for young kids to volunteer because of all the liability issues, so we decided to create our own organization for that purpose. We have an event every month, and children participate right along with their parents. Today we're delivering cards and caroling for the seniors at St. Peter Villa, but we've done lots of other things: donated gently used books and toys to community centers, walked and bathed dogs at the animal shelter, picked up trash and planted bulbs, worked at the Dorothy Day House, made sandwiches for those who are homeless, and more. We want our children to learn about giving back to the community, and helping them get involved early is the best way."
Kristen and Pete Landsgaard and family:
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Some of the Memphis Little Helpers at St. Peter Villa
5th Anniversary of Carols and Cards for Seniors

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From the Little Helpers Cards & Carols FB event page: 
Little Helpers has been helping children help others since December 2010. The family volunteer group holds monthly service projects for children of all ages. The program is designed to help young people understand the value of volunteering, recognize the blessings in their lives, broaden their community perspective and feel the sense of accomplishment received from lending a helping hand. The ultimate goal of the program is to raise confident children who see giving back to the community as a normal aspect of their lives.

The following photos are courtesy of the Little Helpers Cards & Carols FB event page.
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Kristen Landsgaard, Little Helpers
FB:  Little Helpers
American Towns Article:  Little Helpers Give Back to the Community
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Gina

12/17/2015

 
"The best advice I've ever gotten? Live your life like an open book. If you harbor secrets, just know that someone is going to find out the truth sooner or later. Be honest and truthful about who you are."
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"I come from a family rooted in the upholstery business. I spent lots of time in the multitude of textile warehouses and stores of New York City, so textiles are often where my designs begin to take shape. I let textures, prints, and colors speak to my senses. I’ve studied fashion design in San Francisco and at the Fashion Institute of Technology, where the focus was on learning the 'business' of fashion. Good advice for anything that is your passion: always continue to hone your skills. A true designer understands the human body, patternmaking, grading, sewing and construction, as well as manufacturing and cost analysis. Today much of my design aesthetic is inspired by the vibe I get from the explosive Memphis arts, music, & cultural scene. In the coming year I’m looking forward to expanding my GVD custom client listings and opening a larger studio."
Gina Von Dee Designs
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Gina Von Dee, Creative Director at Gina Von Dee Designs
Please feel free to contact me for your Special Occasion Consultation
#Bridal #Broadway #CustomCouture #Prom #Pageants

Etsy:  Gina Von Dee Etsy Shop
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FB:  
Gina Von Dee
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Sekou

12/16/2015

 
"I just graduated from UT with a Master's in Physician Assistant Studies. It took four years of undergraduate work, two and a half years in a post-baccalaureate biology program, and two years at UT, but I'm done. I'm taking my boards on Friday. The next step will be working as a Physician Assistant in a Family Practice setting. This is not all about my accomplishments though. What I've been able to do is the result of the efforts of my family and the friends I consider family. They were there for me before I even existed, and I'm grateful for them. I'm optimistic and excited about the future, especially about giving back to the community. I have a duty to perform for the people who helped me along the way."
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Sekou Rawlins, Physician Assistant
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Stephen

12/15/2015

 
“I’m a psychology major, but I also teach dance. Hope Church has a dance group for people with Down syndrome and autism, and this past spring they asked me to teach a class on hip-hop. We met for about a dozen sessions, and it was great. Communicating with someone on the autism spectrum is like an English speaker trying to communicate with a person who speaks only Chinese. The two of you have different languages, so it's easy to miss each other's meaning. When I taught the class, I was alert for clues into what I came to think of as the secret language of each individual person. I was always trying to translate my instruction in a way that particular person could understand.  With one student I could do a series of movements and he could follow right along. But with the next student, that didn’t work; I had to do a very short sequence and let him echo me. It was different with everybody. You can’t just say, ‘Oh, they're on the autism spectrum. This is how they are. This is how they learn.’ ‘They’ is a nasty term. There is no ‘they.’ Every person is an individual, just like anybody else. Working with this group was a good experience. I would do it again in a second.”
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Stephen Blancq, Dance instructor with Beth Cross Centre of Dance & Voice
FB:  Hope Church
Website:  Hope Church
FB:  Beth Cross Centre of Dance & Voice
Website:  Beth Cross Centre of Dance & Voice

FB:  Autism Moms Group Memphis TN (open to parents of children on the autism spectrum - ask to join the group)
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Jaylin

12/14/2015

 
"If Martin Luther King was alive today and I could talk to him, the first thing I'd say is, 'How's your day going?' Then I'd ask him how I could become a speaker like him. I admire the things he did. He helped make it so that black kids and white kids could go to the same schools and everybody could use the same bathrooms. I don't care what color people are, I just want to have close friends. I think we should treat everybody with kindness, the same way we treat people who are the same color we are."
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Breanna

12/13/2015

 
"I hang around with mostly positive people and don't let negative people bring me down. I keep telling myself, 'Don't follow the wrong crowd.' Whenever I mess up, God forgives me and gives me another chance. My mom encourages me too. She says, 'Just keep doing what you're doing and God will bless you with a good job, good friends, and a good life to live.'"
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Tanjala

12/12/2015

 
"Courage is standing up for yourself or for somebody else even when you're afraid. You never know what the outcome might be. There was a girl at school that got picked on a lot because her hair was nappy, her clothes weren't too fresh, and she smelled. People laughed in her face, touched on her clothes, and said, 'You're stinky.' She just sat there and cried. One day I got fed up and said to them, 'You wouldn't like it if that was you. You wouldn't like it if that was your little sister. Nobody in this world is perfect.' We argued back and forth, and then the girl who had been bullied wiped her face, stood up, and started speaking for herself. Up until then, she didn't know she had a friend."
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