Earlier this month, children of all ages danced under a large tent in a wide, grassy lot located on the side of the Lake Grove Village Housing Complex. The lot, at 35th Street and Cottage Grove Avenue, began to fill with neighborhood residents and supporters in anticipation of the Center of Higher Development’s “We T.A.L.K” Teen Summit.
We
T.A.L.K (Teens Addressing Life’s Koncerns) was organized by the non-profit
community service organization in an effort to give teens involved in its
programs an opportunity to ask questions and receive honest answers about the
issues they face that are not often addressed.
“We had
been trying to come up with different things that our older kids would like to
do,” said Qiana Gillespie, the summit organizer and site manger for Lake Grove
Village Housing Complex. “One of the things they said is ‘we just want to talk
about the things that bothers us’, and that’s how this came about.”
The roster
for the June 10 summit included Na-Tae’ Thompson, co-founder of a local
teen-produced magazine, True Star. Earvin “Magic” Johnson, whose Magic Johnson
Foundation teamed up with Hewitt Packer Associates to provide computers for The
Center of Higher Development’s computer labs, was scheduled to speak as well.
The speaker line up changed when Johnson sent his regrets at the last minute
and was unable to make it to the event. Nevertheless, his foundation’s
contributions to the organization were honored during the program.
The
Center of Higher Development was founded in 1992 by Rev. Walter Gillespie of
Faith Tabernacle Baptist Church and was a small after school program for
neighborhood latchkey children run out of the church's basement. Today, after
teaming up with the Chicago Community Development Corporation as one of its
service providers, the Center of Higher Development has expanded to 13
locations within city housing complexes.
The sites
have computer labs, and do workforce development and GED training. Participants
range in age from 5 to 65.
“It
started as a passion,” said Center of Higher Development founder and executive
director, Walter Gillespie, when asked what started this initiative. “I have a
strong passion for seeing lives change.”
Gillespie
said events like the summit show growth in the organization and he’s excited to
see more.
“Our goal
is to have a computer center in every underserved community in the city of
Chicago,” said Gillespie.
Copyright
2011 Chicago Defender






