Vol. XXIV No. 5
February 2009

On a Mission to Empower Youth Around the Globe

Joseph W. Polisi should be proud.

The current president of The Juilliard School has always wanted his graduates to be flag bearers of artistic excellence and social consciousness. Today, through ASTEP, a group of Juilliard alumni are doing just that.

Natasha Roja was one of the campers/group leaders who helped design and create the annual mural project this past summer in Homestead, Fla.

ASTEP—an acronym for Artists Striving to End Poverty—was conceived by the well-known Broadway music director Mary-Mitchell Campbell, during her tenure on the drama faculty at Juilliard. While volunteering at Mother Teresa’s mission and elsewhere in India, she became convinced that performing artists like herself could help those in need by serving them through their art.

At the same time, the founding members of the student group ARTreach (which has a similar mission) were about to graduate from Juilliard. They knew they wanted to continue the work they were doing on a larger, professional level, while passing ARTreach on to current students eager to pick up the baton. Thus, leaving ARTreach behind at Juilliard, they pooled their resources with Campbell’s, and in 2006, the new nonprofit organization ASTEP was born.

In its mission statement, ASTEP declares that it “uses the arts as a tool to empower young people with creativity, knowledge, and a strong sense of self-esteem; factors which help them advance their lives and communities.” The organization also enables artists to connect with youths around the globe, using their gifts to create change. Current ASTEP efforts include arts camps for disadvantaged children in Florida and South Africa, as well as unique opportunities to serve as volunteer teachers in an ASTEP-run orphanage in India. In each of these areas, ASTEP increases its effectiveness by partnering with local nonprofit organizations with related goals.

In Homestead, Fla., for example—an area designated as “hyper-poor” by the Department of Children and Families—ASTEP partners with EnFamilia, Inc. to provide dance, drama, music, poetry, playwriting, literature, and visual-art workshops free of charge during the summer for the children of Homestead. During that time, the students are able to work with volunteer arts professionals in a safe and inspiring environment. Collaborative projects, including murals and theater pieces, are created and shared. For many students, this is their first exposure to the arts and getting to know the likes of Shakespeare, Chopin, and Martha Graham. Issues relevant to the children’s lives are also explored; the subject matter is diverse and ranges from self-empowerment and gang violence to H.I.V./AIDS awareness, as the children are encouraged to communicate their realities through the power of expression. Says former ASTEP program director Abby Gerdts (Drama, Group 33), “The amazing thing is that a child will write a play about rape or alcoholism or abuse, and it’s usually a direct reflection of what’s going on in their lives. That’s where the partnering organizations come in … to deal with the fallout of a child finally being able to talk—even through a mask—about what’s going on.”

An organization that taps into artists' intrinsic need to simultaneously perform and serve.

Eighteen-year-old Natasha Rojas, who has been through several sessions of camp, speaks passionately about the change effected in her life. “Living in Homestead is hard,  especially during puberty. I had very low self-esteem. I went to the first orientation and Mo [Mauricio Salgado, Drama, Group 34, a founding ASTEP member] was so full of life and energy. I had never met anyone like that before, and I wanted to be that way and be confident in myself.” When she first started camp, confesses Rojas, she didn’t plan on coming back; now she dreams of being a visual arts teacher. “I love the feeling of teaching kids and want to make it my career.”

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