Monday, June 29, marks the kick-off of the YWCA R.A.C.E. (Resource and Advocacy for Change and Equity) Committee diversity mural and art project. This project will be held at Highland Park High School pulling together over 100 students from the Topeka community. Student groups participating include the YWCA Adopt-a-School Program, YWCA Kids Quest Summer Adventure Camp, and students from Topeka’s first Freedom School.
This six week mural and art project will provide students from different backgrounds an opportunity to learn how differences are assets and not hindrances to working together. Each week, students will be exposed to different cultures, customs and traditions while working on the main mural. The mural will be a collage of different ethnicities, genders and abilities with words that encourage unity and diversity.
In addition to the mural that will be displayed at Highland Park High School, each student will participate in an individual art piece focused on “celebrating diversity” that will be displayed at the Brown v. Board of Education National Historic Site and the YWCA of Topeka.
“This project will give these students a sense of accomplishment partnered with a new appreciation for the arts,” said Lover Chancler, YWCA Racial Justice Director.
This mural and art project will also allow accessibility to the arts to families that may not otherwise have exposure. Of the students participating, at least half will be of low to moderate income families. Additionally, the mural will be located in at high school with at least 85% of its student population at or below the poverty line.
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