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How it all began...

Ashleigh's Student ArmyOn a scorching hot day in the spring of 1998, a tiny Haitian girl stands barefoot on a gravel road wearing a torn dress and clutching a chicken as tears run down her dirty face. This photographic image is the way I was introduced to the world’s inequities and the poverty that infested the small village of Sosua in the Dominican Republic. Here, people live in musty tin shacks, sleep on dirt floors, drink contaminated water, are malnourished, and all have a look of despair. These inequities ignited a flame of determination that changed how I viewed and lived life.

Incensed, yet inspired, I founded Ashleigh’s Student Army. It began when I showed classmates the photo of the girl that resulted in the collection of 250 pairs of sneakers. Empowered by how much my friends and I accomplished in a short time, I vowed to do more. In 2000, I traveled to Sosua and visited Villa Redencion, distributing hundreds of supplies to the Haitian refugees who lived there among the Dominican poor. As my family left the compound that day, adults mournfully outstretched their scrawny hands through the barbed wire to touch us one last time. The line of inequality was obvious, but I had been one of the first to cross that line. The trip would change my life forever. My goal, in time, was to make the line fade and eventually disappear.

With the village’s major benefactor, I solicited donations and the help of medical professionals. My Army organized volunteers, collected and distributed over 15,000 medical, educational and clothing items. In time, we helped to build a community - a school, a playground, new shelters, and refueled lives full of hope for a brighter future. The Army’s motto, “The future begins with us” lives in everything we do. In the past five years, I have networked with over 3,000 student and adult volunteers, building bridges of support, understanding and hope.

While it has been complicated dealing with island politics and human ignorance and indifference, the results of each service trip prove any difficulties to be worthwhile. In 2002, after soliciting thousands in donations, I led a group of teenage girls to Villa Redencion where we physically built four two-room cinder block homes with running water and electricity. As we built the walls of hope, I realized that we were simultaneously tearing down walls of ignorance. On our annual service trips each spring, teenagers transform their thinking, actions and lives as they begin to realize the awesome potential they possess, the impact they can have, and the pride they can take in changing one little corner of the world.

That original flame of determination continues to burn bright within me and has affected all that I do. My college plans include continued work with Ashleigh’s Student Army, because the message of hope for all people lies in the belief that “The future begins with us.”

Mission Photos
 
Ashleigh's Student Army
Ashleigh's Student Army
Ashleigh's Student Army
 

The more homes that are built, the more lives we can save. It’s that simple!

 

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