Food, toys and families

We’ve got a new podcast you may enjoy — something special for the upcoming holiday season. And because we’d rather have you listen than read about it, we’ll keep this blog very brief.

It’s another delightful chat with our good friend, Jose Soto, Corporate Responsibility Analyst for State Farm. As you know, State Farm has sponsored the Humanity Project every year starting in 2008 — and that public-spirited company is the reason our acclaimed I Care program exists. You likely also know that State Farm is among the most generous and responsible companies in this nation. And so once more this holiday season, State Farm is helping out with food drives, toy drives and more. In our podcast you’ll also hear about ways that you can assist families in need during this season of giving. As always, big thanks to State Farm! Listen to the podcast.

One Child At A Time

At the Humanity Project, we believe in the individual. Humanity, afterall, is only a collection of individuals past, present and future. Our programs for both kids and adults focus on the value of every individual: “Equality For Each, Respect For All.”

Now we’re launching something new that gives more attention than ever to the individual. One child at a time. In November, the Humanity Project begins our own mentoring program, starting with two boys and one girl from Morrow Elementary School. Big thanks to our good friend, Guidance Counselor Mindy Nguyen, for helping us set this up. We view the mentoring as an expansion of our Humanity Club, which works intensively with young school leaders who in turn teach their classmates about respect-for-all, equality and antibullying. The three young kids chosen to begin our mentoring efforts each will partner with one member from the Humanity Project Board of Directors, connecting one-on-one weekly for special lessons focused on human values. We’ll teach these concepts wrapped up in games and discussions as well as through fun assignments in reading and writing. In this way, we advance their literacy skills as we help them better understand their own worth and the importance of other human beings.

So many children fell behind during this ongoing pandemic. Reading and writing are among the areas that especially suffered. We believe the Humanity Project can assist educators trying to make up this lost ground through our individual sessions. At the same time we further fulfill our mission by teaching a select group of kids “greater respect for the goodness and inherent value of humanity,” as our mission statement says. That includes helping them better appreciate their own value. To us, this seems an important new step forward as the Humanity Project turns 16-years-old in November. We hope to expand our mentoring program in the months and years ahead.

Fabled Lives

We want you to know about a special book, with 100% of royalties for the first two years going directly to the Humanity Project. That audiobook is called, “Fabled Lives: Simple Stories You Need For Living In A Complex World.” You’ll find it available on Apple Books, Walmart, Google Play, Barnes and Noble and nearly every other major seller of audio-only books. (Amazon/Audible does not sell books that are available only on audio.) Or you can just visit the Author’s Guild website of Robert Spencer Knotts, who wrote the fables and the original music that accompanies each story in this charming book: Visit the author’s website.

That author, of course, is also the founder and president of the Humanity Project, Bob Knotts. He wrote these dozen fables over a period of 14 years — and they are posted for free on this website: Visit our Fables page. One of them is even posted here in an audio version. Overwhelmingly, those fables are the most popular feature on the Humanity Project website, attracting hits daily from nations spread around the globe on six continents.

Now you can enjoy them all in a single new audiobook, produced and engineered by Matt Corey — an award-winning sound designer and a VP on the Humanity Project Board of Directors. The audiobook is professional quality and runs more than an hour long. You’ll find these morality tales written for an adult audience, or even older kids. Each carries a clear lesson as fables have for centuries, from Aesop on down. Enjoy them, pass them along to friends and family … and maybe give them a little thought as well. They are cleverly written but, yes, simple stories we all can use for living in this very very complex world of ours.

Stories From The LGBTQ Community - an event

The Humanity Project is co-hosting a big event on Sunday, November 14. If you’re in South Florida we hope you’ll join us and our friends from SAVE, co-hosts for “Open Dialogues: Stories from the LGBTQ community.” It will be a special night.

You’ll enjoy an evening of arts and a short documentary that features coming out stories from South Florida, a powerful film you probably won’t have seen anywhere else. The documentary was produced by the Art and Culture Center/Hollywood, in Hollywood, Florida, and directed by Freddy Rodriguez. (Watch a 90-second trailer of the film.) A discussion will follow the film — and then we’ll offer short theater pieces by members of Lesbian Thespians as well as vocal performances. The event is free but donations are welcome. Drinks and snacks will be available for purchase as well. Consistent with many other local theaters, we request that all guests are fully vaccinated against COVID-19 (at least two weeks after final dose) and provide proof of vaccination; i.e. original vaccination card, copy of vaccination card, or picture of vaccination card. Masks are required to be worn, covering the mouth and nose, while inside the theater at all times regardless of vaccination status.

The event will coincide with the Humanity Project’s 16th birthday: we were founded on November 5, 2005. Our friends at SAVE have been around even longer, the oldest LGBTQ advocacy organization in South Florida. You can follow our Facebook event page, if you like: Follow us on Facebook. Or you can register for free on Eventbrite to make sure you reserve seats: Our Eventbrite page. Both the Humanity Project and SAVE believe in equality and respect for all human beings. That’s the theme of our November event — and we think you’ll find it both hopeful and inspiring. Join us.

  • Sunday, November 14, 6 — 8 p.m. at The Foundry at Wilton Theater Factory, 2306 North Dixie Highway, Wilton Manors, FL 33305

  • Free, but donations are welcomed (and will be evenly split between the Humanity Project and SAVE)

Back In The Classroom

We’ve persevered during a pandemic, keeping our work moving forward through programs, presentations and panel discussions at parks and libraries… sometimes virtually, sometimes in person as we deemed safe. Now the Humanity Project is back in the classroom, both virtually and in person. So far, our Humanity Club sessions are going well.

We’re working with 12 hand-picked student leaders at Pembroke Pines Charter Elementary School in Pembroke Pines, Florida. These are bright, engaged kids who want to make a difference in this challenged world. Our wonderful Humanity Project Board of Directors VP, Piper Spencer, is a teacher there, working for us in person to help our young folks understand the importance of “Equality For Each, Respect For All.” Other knowledgeable Board members offer virtual lessons during our one-hour sessions.

As always, we plan to involve the entire school in promoting respect — and stopping bullying. We’re also going to build another “Humanity Garden” as a place of rest and reflection and inspiration at this 700-student facility. We’ll tell you more about all that in the coming weeks … and our other efforts to contribute to a society where every human being feels valuable. For now, we want to thank Piper Spencer and Pembroke Pines Charter Elementary School. We’re very glad to get back inside the classroom.

Together, Toward Equality

The Humanity Project values our partnerships. We believe that working alongside likeminded organizations, corporations and individuals allows us to expand our reach … and accomplish much more. The wonderful community foundation, Our Fund Foundation, is a notable case in point.

Today, we thank Our Fund Foundation for their ongoing financial support — we were just awarded another generous grant by these caring folks. We are deeply grateful to Our Fund CEO David Jobin, as well as his staff including Mark and Obed … and their fine Board of Directors. And we are proud to say of both our Antibullying Through The Arts and Humanity Club programs, “This program was made possible by a grant from Our Fund Foundation, an LGBTQ community foundation.” Our Fund is the nation’s third largest LGBTQ foundation.

Their support was specifically awarded for our acclaimed antibullying programs, yes, but Our Fund recognizes that our work on behalf of equality for the LGBTQ population goes well beyond youth programming. On Monday, September 20, for example, the Humanity Project will offer a one-hour presentation as a sponsor of the Barry University Peace-In. The event is in recognition of the United Nations International Day of Peace. This presentation will include our founder’s overview of the Humanity Project philosophy promoting “Equality For Each, Respect For All”… and a discussion by Mandi Hawke of the Humanity Project Leadership Council about our efforts specifically on behalf of the LGBTQ community. In October, the Humanity Project will sponsor more events and presentations as part of National Coming Out Week. And we will hold two major events in November with both a special film and a theater piece on LGBTQ issues, working in partnership with the respected LGBTQ agency, SAVE. One of these events will be at The Foundry in Wilton Manors, Florida, the other event will be held a bit later in Miami-Dade County.

We work every day to instill greater respect for the goodness and inherent value of humanity, our stated mission. This means working with both kids and adults in classes and panels, presentations and seminars as well as through free materials offered on our three websites and nine social media pages. We try to inspire, to uplift, to remind everyone that each human being possesses an equal value and should be treated accordingly. That’s what the Humanity Project is all about … and we feel fortunate to have a partner in the Our Fund Foundation that shares this goal.

Our New Team Member

Gail Johnson, Humanity Project Leadership Council

Today, we welcome a new member of the Humanity Project team. Gail Johnson joins our distinguished Humanity Project Leadership Council, a hand-picked group of community leaders who assist our efforts in a variety of ways.

Gail is a 28-year-old college graduate who is pursuing a career in special needs education. She believes in educating all children in ways that offer a compassionate and welcoming environment. A family-oriented mother of one girl, Gail strives to make sure every child’s voice can be heard, regardless of race, religion, sexual orientation or personal beliefs. Now she will head up our work on racial equality, taking over for Gabby Bendel. (Thank you, Gabby, for your help! We look forward to working with you on other projects soon!)

We met Gail Johnson during our Humanity Club sessions with young girls this summer at Delevoe Park, where she serves as Recreation Director. Our Humanity Club inspires kids of color to believe in themselves and to lead their peers toward greater social equality and respect-for-all people. Gail was engaged and energetic each week and she clearly cared about making a difference. We knew she’d be a good fit for our Leadership Council.

Welcome, Gail, on behalf of everyone at the Humanity Project! We’re excited to keep making a difference …together.

One Person At A Time

How do we change the world? At the Humanity Project, we strongly believe the answer is this: One person at a time. Until individuals are motivated to focus on something greater than their own immediate self-interest, human interactions will remain more or less as they are. People become prisoners of their own egos, of their personal wants and instant gratifications. Far too many of us are far too self-centered, to our detriment and the damage of society. Humanity can only really change one individual at a time. That's what we try to do in our work with both kids and adults. We have good company for that idea too. Here are just two examples from two very fine minds of the past:

“You cannot hope to build a better world without improving the individuals. To that end each of us must work for his own improvement, and at the same time share a general responsibility for all humanity, our particular duty being to aid those to whom we think we can be most useful.” Marie Curie, 1867-1934, Polish chemist and physicist

“If you see that some aspect of your society is bad, and you want to improve it, there is only one way to do so: you have to improve people. And in order to improve people, you begin with only ONE thing: you can become better yourself.” Leo Tolstoy, 1828-1910, Russian author

Many folks think that simply getting more people to agree on the need for individual change has no meaningful effect on the world, as if humanity first needs to work out all the particulars about how we’ll do things differently. It’s naive, they say, to believe that merely a desire for new attitudes in daily life can bring about good results: Just wanting change won’t make it happen. We disagree. To us, that’s rather like an author who refuses to begin a new book until every plot point and character detail is settled in advance. Writers don’t work that way. The initial step involves recognizing a strong desire to create the book, with most specifics determined during the writing.

Nothing happens until individuals are motivated. That’s why we feel the Humanity Project “Pledge For Humanity” is so valuable. When someone signs their name to a pledge, they tend to take it seriously. Not always, of course, and to varying degrees depending on the person. But if the pledge is signed freely and in good faith, the words usually have some effect on the signer’s psyche. Afterall, even the President of the United States only pledges to uphold the Constitution — nothing else compels him (or her) to do so.

We hope you’ll sign our pledge, which you can do quickly and easily at this link: Check out our Pledge For Humanity. Meanwhile, we continue to deliver our programs that promote equality and respect-for-all … and to explain our ideas in panel discussions and presentations, on social media and here on our website. Please join our campaign and become a member of the Humanity Project at no cost by signing our Pledge For Humanity. Let’s change the world, one person at a time.

Gardening For Equality

See that sign just above? That’s for our newest Humanity Garden, now under preparation where it will be a permanent gift to the community. Or as the sign itself says, “A reminder of our common humanity.”

Our wonderfully caring Humanity Club girls at Rev. Samuel Delevoe Memorial Park in Ft. Lauderdale have worked with us for weeks to better understand equality and respect-for-all. We also talk a lot about humanity during our sessions with these kids of color. (All girls, to promote gender equality.) The Humanity Project uses music, games, art projects, stories, roleplaying and more to teach our important lessons. And it’s clear that the girls are hearing, and understanding, our message. These are bright children who want to make the world a better place, our leaders of the future.

We’ll end this blog by sharing some pictures of their most recent rock painting efforts — all in the name of humanity. These colorful rocks will become the centerpiece of our Humanity Garden at Delevoe Park, which sits next to the African-America Research Library and Cultural Center. We think it’s a perfect spot for a lovely new indoor garden.

Poetry Of Humanity

Today the Humanity Project offers two poems about humanity. The first is older and famous, a piece read at the funeral of Rep. John Lewis in 2020. The second is a new poem, with a very different point of view. The author of that new poem discusses both works at the end of this post.

I Dream A World

I dream a world where man

No other man will scorn,

Where love will bless the earth

And peace its paths adorn

I dream a world where all

Will know sweet freedom's way,

Where greed no longer saps the soul

Nor avarice blights our day.

A world I dream where black or white,

Whatever race you be,

Will share the bounties of the earth

And every man is free,

Where wretchedness will hang its head

And joy, like a pearl,

Attends the needs of all mankind-

Of such I dream, my world!

(by Langston Hughes)

---------------------------------------------

I Too Dream

I too dream a world

but unlike worlds most

dreamed before.

Mine is a world

pocked by bickering and war,

snarling people

and barking mobs.

Oh yes, I dream of human beings

foaming yet with angers

and fizzing still with fears

bred by the familiar misunderstandings

among careless flung words.

All beings as themselves

so human,

then as now.

But all with one thing imagined

more for those living

in my vivid world anew.

Because my dreaming dreams of

future skirmish-wars defused,

our old hatreds resolving

in a new confidence of knowledge

that wedges aside the ancients

of myth and superstition

lingering indifferently

from millennia elapsed.

I dream of bicker noises

overtaken by song,

the transcendent hymn

of our humanity

crescendoing in a joyful ode

whenever the voices of dissonance

again rise to a din.

Oh yes, dissonance shall surely sound again

and often again in that world I dream,

disharmony intrinsic to a cosmos atonal,

a natural music playing ever out of key

in the chaos of clash and clatter

written into nature’s grand score.

We are organisms

fashioned of conflict.

Crossed purposes of interests and

crosscurrents of histories

will move us then as now,

the panting passions of our peoples

still puffed up and selfish centered.

We cannot be more than we are made.

But we need not be less.

Yes when I dream of human beings

being as the human finally fulfilled,

every member of our envisioned species

then understands that existence without

conflict has always been fantasy,

a conjuring of Utopia unattainable

amid a universe propelled

ever by the myriad colliding

streams of necessity.

Nature’s legacy to human beings

is conflict, oh yes,

but conflict resolved by reason

is humanity’s gift to nature.

In this world I dream about

judgment will nearly

balance out emotion,

the angers and fears of this moment

dissolving soon in the wisdom

of the next.

We cannot be more than we are made.

But we need not be less.

As an infant develops to a child

who ages to an adult

who may evolve to a

human being wondering and wise,

so humanity still toddles

toward our maturity,

wobbling step by

faltered step in

the long long childhood.

I dream this child standing

one day a young adult

proud and imperfect,

oftentime curious with uncertainty,

straining to discern the confusing paths

forward before advancing

forcefully in bold stride.

(by Robert Spencer Knotts — Copyright © 2020, Robert Spencer Knotts. All rights reserved.)

————————————————————

A brief comment by Robert Spencer Knotts, Founder & President of the Humanity Project:

I was inspired to write my poem as a reply to the beautiful work you see above by Langston Hughes, the justly famous American poet who lived from 1901 to 1967. I’ve admired his poetry for a long time, since my late teens. But as much as I am moved by his flowing vision of a human Utopia in “I Dream A World,” I also feel it does us an injustice as a species in some way. I don’t believe a human Utopia is possible. But I do believe we advance as humanity, slow and uneven step by step, toward a more fully realized version of ourselves. That’s what I am trying to say in “I Too Dream.” And it’s what the Humanity Project is all about at some deeper level. We are a deliberately small but determined nonprofit focused on doing our best for a more fulfilled humanity… This is something we believe can be accomplished in part by teaching both kids and adults to recognize the profound value of other individuals: “Equality For Each, Respect For All!” In our imperfection, there is potential and, always, there is much much hope for the future.

Humanity Club -- Live Again

Humanity Club: Summer 2021

We’re back! Our acclaimed Humanity Club program is working with kids again … in person! No Zoom, no frozen video or inaudible audio. And it’s great!

Yes, some things are still different than when we last were live. Masks are needed for instance — worn by everyone in the room but lowered or removed briefly when the moment seemed safe. And all of us on the Humanity Project team of course are fully vaccinated. We’re doing our best to make sure the children, their teachers and our own Humanity Project folks all stay healthy.

Take a look at a few pics from yesterday’s first non-Zoom Humanity Club session in 16 months. This was at Reverend Samuel Delevoe Memorial Park, beside the African American Research Library in Fort Lauderdale. We began teaching these smart girls of color what we mean by “Equality For Each, Respect For All,” using art projects, games, music, stories and more to connect with their young minds. We plan to help them build a Humanity Garden by the end of the summer: a lovely spot that celebrates our collective humanity by expressing respect for each individual. Check out the photos below. The kids seemed just as happy as we were to be back in the classroom again.

Notice the car… respect even on our roads!

And notice the rainbow with two girls… Equality For Each, Respect For All!

Having fun, all together again!


Our Latest Covid Vaccination Event

On Sunday, May 30, the Humanity Project held another Covid vaccination event. This time, we worked with parishioners and walk-ins at Hopewell Missionary Baptist Church in Pompano Beach, Florida. It was a success, as you can see from some of the photos taken that day.

Before this, we set up a large event at the local Pride Center, which offers services to the LGBTQ community. And we have worked for months on distributing information to promote Covid vaccine equity among LGBTQ, African American and other underrepresented communities that may not receive the vaccine at rates experienced by other populations. Our wonderful major sponsor, Our Fund Foundation, helped support this work with a generous grant to the Humanity Project.

Though the pandemic is waning in this country, it seems, the Humanity Project remains committed to vaccine equity — and we continue to strive toward that goal. Our motto, afterall, is, “Equality For Each, Respect For All.” We believe that a worldwide health crisis creates many glaring inequalities. Our mission requires us to do what we can to help correct this imbalance.