Jason Taylor Foundation’s Bluapple Poetry Network receives Broward College Grant for MLK Day of Service Event “Write to Ride” Inspired by the Freedom Riders

Style Magazine Newswire | 1/10/2018, 6:52 a.m.
The bluapple Poetry Network’s C.O.R.E will take to the streets in honor of the Freedom Riders with a ride of …
Martin Luther King Jr.

(Black PR Wire) The bluapple Poetry Network’s C.O.R.E will take to the streets in honor of the Freedom Riders with a ride of their own on Monday, January 15 as part of Broward College’s MLK Day of Service.

To Celebrate Martin Luther King Day, ten youth poets representing the Omari Hardwick bluapple poetry Network of the Jason Taylor Foundation will take part in a day of service event entitled Write To Ride, inspired by the original freedom riders of the civil rights movement. bluapple’s C.O.R.E. (Collective Of Raw Expression) is a group of young writers assembled from across Broward and Miami-Dade County public schools. The goal of the C.O.R.E. is to foster not only great poets, but also compassionate and engaged community members to be ambassadors for the Network, their respective schools, and for society as a whole.

Paying tribute to the brave activists who rode interstate buses into the segregated southern United States in 1961 and subsequent years, the C.O.R.E. students will use public transportation to visit three partnering organizations, including Broward Partnership, Lippman Youth Shelter, and Women in Distress. At each location, students will provide in-kind donations including hygiene packs and fleece blankets that they have assembled, and will also deliver poetry performances and writing workshops.

Additionally, each C.O.R.E. member prepared for the ride by reading “March”, a three-part graphic memoir authored by Congressman John Lewis, a key figure of the civil rights movement. Members will then distribute copies of the “March” trilogy to teens at the Lippman Youth Shelter upon their visit. Funding from Broward College has assisted the bluapple Poetry Network in providing this essential and historically charged opportunity.

“Write to Ride is such a positive initiative. I’m glad to be able represent something so important along with the other C.O.R.E. members,” said Ramis Hashimi, a youth poet from Stoneman Douglas High School. “With all the negativity in the world, it’s nice to be a part of a group of eclectic young poets and spread a little bit of joy to a world that sometimes seems dark. It’s exciting to meet people and offer them support through tough times and to honor civil rights heroes from our American history. This feels like a good way to remember the positive parts of our world.”