![]() |
|||||
| develop | amplify | engage | our offerings| director's page| news | support us | contact | home | |||||
|
Pals make work more tolerable Good relationships help ease troubles, give the job meaning The power of music to engage Musicians decide the time is right for protest songs One hundred years of service: Boys & Girls Club celebrates CD Review: Empowerment: The Power To Break You Free POWER play Hub project promotes social conscience Aiming for an alternative hip-hop Project Think Different Press Update Tapping music's power to inspire social change Boston’s progressive record label gives ‘EmPOWERment’ When Teen Dynamo Talks, City Listens Bling Fing Words of power, sounds of promise Hello, There column Pop-culture project aims to give new ideas to kids Hello, There column Stirring consciences with hip-hop youth conference puts spin on social awareness and activism
|
P:TD in the newsPop-culture project aims to give new ideas to kidsBy
Azell Murphy Cavaan Imagine a pop culture in which parents and kids dance to the same beat.
Project: Think Different, a nonprofit organization that uses the arts
to teach children about community improvement, believes that world is
within reach. "Our mission is to use popular culture to inspire
and challenge people to live the change they want to see in the world," said
Scherazade Daruvalla King, founder and president of Project: Think Different. The event marks the debut of "Until," a spoken-word CD by
Ayisha Knight, a Boston-area poet and storyteller who is profoundly deaf.
Reggae, hip-hop, folk and other spoken-word musicians will also perform
during the event. Janet Wu, anchorwoman for WHDH-TV (Ch. 7), is the event's
host. Alvin Poussaint of Harvard Medical School is the chairman. Founded
in 2002, the organization uses the talents of singers, poets, filmmakers,
writers, rappers and other artists to provide young people with a hip
alternative to the images of sex, violence and drugs prevalent in mainstream
media. Knight said she uses acting, photography and even American Sign
Language to break down walls of discrimination. "Art is as much
a political act as it is a thing of beauty," she But even more than entertaining young people in a way that makes them
think critically about the world around them, Project: Think Different
aims to move them to action. "We want to develop a message that
wakes people up to the power they hold as changemakers," King said. "We
want them to see there's an alternative to popular media and then we
want them to leverage that influence on policymakers." For more information about the Project: Think Different launch party, call 617-320-6433 or go to www.projectthinkdifferent.org. |
||||
| develop | amplify | engage | our offerings | director's page | news | support us | contact | home | |||||