Tuesday, July 15, 2008

UNSUNG HEROES AND PROGRAMS THAT WORK

While there is so much to complain about in our sluggish recovery
there are people and programs that offer glimmers of hope. Marie Lamb
and the Contemporary Arts Center's annual Summer Arts Camp are at the top of that list for me.

Marie has been the Education Director at the Contemporary Arts Center
for the past 8 years and even before Katrina did more community
outreach for our under resourced children (and on a shoestring budget)
than any other organization of it's type. And her amazingly creative
summer camps are such big draws that they are always sell outs months
ahead.

Marie, a ceramicist, and her husband Michael, a furniture designer,
had just put the roof on their dream house a block off the beach in
Pass Christian, Mississippi when the storm hit, taking everything they
had spent the last several years to build. All that remained was the
slab where the house had stood. On top of that, because they had not
yet moved in, there was no home owners insurance. So everything they
had was gone, including Marie's job while the CAC felt its way back
from the disaster. Despite the enormous hardship Marie and her family
endured I have never heard her complain once; a sign of the character
that makes her so unique.

Her period away from the CAC was luckily short lived and she is back
at the CAC making her magic all during the year. The highlight for me
is the summer camp which is a 4 week program for children ages 6-16
involving theatre, cooking, dance, visual arts and music. Each year
has a theme and this year's is "The Art of Invention". Week one will
be "Wheel", followed by "Flight", "Locomotion" and finally
"Experiment". Another plus for the camp is the fact that forty percent
of the children attending are on scholarship thanks to the generous
funding of the Emeril Lagasse Foundation and there is a healthy
diversity among the 120 children attending each week.


Every Friday there are performances, artwork hung on the walls and food made and served by the children. Anyone interested is welcome and one year there was even a visit from Lt. Governor Mitch Landrieu, his sister U.S. Senator Mary Landrieu and U.S. Senator Barack Obama! Watch the clip on YouTube of the event that Laura and Guido filmed.

If you are in the area and want to see a program that works for
children of all races and socio-economic levels stop by the CAC at
1:00p.m. the next four Fridays and I guarantee that you'll be
inspired.

Lastly, as a sign of our recovery Marie and Michael have rebuilt their
home; a perfect blend of crafmanship, spirit and creativity. It is a
testiment to hard work, perserverence and the love and support of
family.

Babs Johnson

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