
As some of you may know, I've recently started my internship with the Sanctuary Project in Wilkinsburg. My job includes the responsibility of connecting local youth with programs at churches and other places in the community. Working with the other intern, I am also the listening ear for the project, finding out what local youth want to see implemented in the community.
For our patrol, we started out on one of Wilkinsburg's most notorious corners. "If you don't know that already," George Spencer, Chapter President and National Secretary, warned us interns, "then know that now." We walked from there down Franklin, where we walked past many people interested in the Mad Dads cause. Every Mad Dad wore either a green logo shirt and hat or a bright yellow/green vest for visibility. Several times cars would honk at us, or people would wave and shout out their windows, or simply approach us to thank us for what Mad Dads is doing in the neighborhood. Though some kids would scatter when they saw us approaching, perhaps worried that we would catch them in illicit activity, many accepted literature from us and welcoming handshakes.
One of the more moving parts of the patrol was when we walked down the street Mad Dads adopted (the name of which currently escapes me). Since the organization started, the street has been transformed. The abandoned houses have been boarded up with beautifully painted windows, about half of which were painted by one of the Mad Dads members. The lawns, which used to grow out of control, are now for the most part trimmed and neat. Many people on the street were glad to see Mad Dads and talked with them for awhile.
Mad Dads is not just a "patrol" in that they aim to break up illicit activity, they also positively reinforce and educate. When we ran into a young man who explained that he was raising his little brother, he was met with a chorus of "that's a beautiful thing you're doing, man" from the dads in the organization. It was impressive to me to see that they were able to so easily locate the positive things going on in young people's lives and then build them up. In fact, the Pittsburgh chapter of the organization is actually listed by the now-international group as a "best practice chapter," one that serves as an example to other chapters of Mad Dads around the world.
Though my experiences included some negative reaction from people towards the organization (a few cuss words or groups trying to ignore us), most of the reception in the neighborhood was positive. And one thing that struck me: Several times people said "I don't know what you stand for, but I'm tired of what's going on in this neighborhood, please give me your literature." People could tell just by LOOKING at us that we were out to make a positive difference. And the people who are familiar with the organization? They were so happy to see us. My overall impression is that Mad Dads is making a difference, especially with the struggling young people who so desperately need father figures to help them grow up in this neighborhood. Let's hope the next 5 years of this organization are just as productive and more.
You can check out the Pittsburgh Mad Dads site by clicking here.
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