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We Are All Neighbors
Neighbors do help neighbors. Every day, they use
their time and their gifts to keep their friends and families going.
Many, especially those living in tough communities, work hard to
deal with the challenges of communities where unemployment, violence,
and drugs take their toll. In the face of these obstacles, community
residents look for the connections to vital resources that would
improve their odds of succeeding.
There may be no better example of the spirit of
getting involved and volunteering than the time-honored American
tradition called a barn-raising. From the earliest days of our country, neighbors
would gather at a homestead and work together to build a barn, often
in a single day. Neighbors lent a hand when they became aware of
neighbors they could help. They took responsibility for one another.
More than barns were built in the process. True bonds of community
spirit were forged.
You might not think you've seen a good barn-raising
lately, but they are happening around you all the time. The tools
have changed, and what gets built may not be a barn, yet the spirit
of volunteerism – of neighboring in its truest, sincerest form – is
alive and well in cities, towns, and rural communities everywhere.
We need your help to tap into that irrepressible volunteer spirit to address
some of the most entrenched challenges in America's toughest communities today.
You can provide a renewed sense of hope and the means to build a better future
for individuals and families building on connections that arise from common
goals, mutual respect, responsibility, and ownership. Provide the tools and
use skills and talents to find collective solutions to create family supportive
communities, networks, and opportunities necessary to bring neighbors together.
Use the following links to discover more about
neighboring.
For an abbreviated version of the information
and resources included in this Web site, view for
an Adobe Acrobat file of the printed version.
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