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Realizing Dr. King's dream
through SAAB
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An article written by
Josie Koler of Channel 24 in Toledo, Ohio outlines
the Martin Luther King Day celebration held by The
University of Toledo and the Board of Community
Relations for the City of Toledo. (Monday, January 19,
2009)
A
dream fulfilled. This year, Dr. King's holiday falls one
day before Senator Barack Obama becomes the nation's
forty-fourth, and first, African American president. The
dream of Dr. King is being fulfilled by
his inauguration, and also by a service organizations
here in Toledo. One in specific, which has outlined its
mission as: Saving Lives...Salvaging Dreams. The
motto belongs to the Student African American
Brotherhood (SAAB). SAAB is helping shape
young lives in young men like J.P. King, a student at
Bowsher High. "Since Barack Obama won the presidency, it
makes me think anything can happen. Impossible is
nothing. If you have a dream there's nothing stopping
you from going out and getting it." His mother, Mona-Mae
Mitchell says she cannot believe the change that has
taken place since she was his age. "We have seen
the dream and we have entered that stage where we can
imagine anything is possible."
Founder and Executive
Director of SAAB, Dr. Tyrone Bledsoe Sr. is basking in
the glory of President-elect Obama, but says there is
still work to be done. "I'm challenging people to take
it as a social responsibility to reach out and help
those who have fallen by the wayside." By participating
in service learning, SAAB's term for community service,
and then we all get something back suggests Dr.
Bledsoe. A thought process resonating with J.P. "You
can't just sit around and think everything is going to
happen. You have to get out there and do work, you have
to help with your community if you want to make it a
better place." There are no more excuses says Dr.
Bledsoe, "I never thought there were excuses in the
first place, but now I always say to my students, now
you definitely don't have an excuse."
The young King, J.P.,
is confident from this day forward; there is a new
frontier willing to accept his leadership and his
participation. "Service is a whole lot. It's probably
the most important thing making your community
better." Mrs. Mitchell noting the dramatic impact of
SAAB, "I think it creates for him this atmosphere that
he can be whatever he wants to be." Which, right now, is
a cardiovascular surgeon. His skin color is no longer a
barrier. "Somebody is not looking at themselves saying,
'I'm better than them. I'm so much better than them
because he's this color and I'm that color.' For his
generation coming up, it looks like that statement is
vanishing."
Realizing another
dream of Dr. King, Dr. Bledsoe, feels President-elect
Obama wasn't chosen by the color of his skin, but by the
content of his character. "He has this mystical ability
to celebrate, inspire, and motivate all over the world.
Not just in the United States. That's what's so
incredible." Motivating young men like J.P. King.
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