Posts Tagged ‘#911Day’

Remembering Through Service

Thursday, July 14th, 2011

September 11, 2011 marks the tenth anniversary of the terrorist attacks that shocked and changed our nation forever. In the days and weeks that followed, the nation came together in an unprecedented spirit of community and commitment. In 2010, the 9/11 Day of Service and Remembrance was singed into law as part of the Edward M Kennedy Serve America Act making September 11 an official National Day of Service.

The 9/11 Day of Service and Remembrance presents a great opportunity to leverage the power of individuals to stand together and honor those that were lost by dedicating the day to the service of others.

HandsOn Network is joining MyGoodDeed to bring together five million Americans, through volunteer events across the country, to participate in 9/11 Day events. You can find a volunteer opportunity near you at 911day.org, and you’ll be able to find a volunteer project with your local HandsOn Action Centers.

Nonprofits from across the country can add their 9/11 Day projects to a project plans to the project database so they can easily be found by volunteers. If a nonprofit is connected to one of our HandsOn Action Centers, they can add a project here. Nonprofits that don’t have a HandsOn Action Center near them can still add their projects to the database.

In addition to individual events, our affiliates in Washington, DC, Boston, New York and San Francisco are planning events that will bring together more than 500 people for the Day of Service and Remembrance. Like so many across our country, these cities were uniquely affected by the events of Sept. 11. Washington, D.C. and New York felt the devastating effects of the attacks on their home turf, one of the planes left from Boston and another never arrived in San Francisco.

We’re honored to partner with MyGoodDeed to mobilize one million people to volunteer by giving of their time, talent and resources in a way that honors those that were lost in the attacks. Service is not only a positive way of paying respect to those that are no longer with us, but a positive way of showing the strength and resiliency of the American spirit.

Even in the face of catastrophe, we come together to help one another. In the face of overwhelming adversity, we reach out and lift one another up, and through service grow closer to one another. Let us come together and, through service and in our own way, honor the people that we’ve lost.

 

A Generation of Kindness

Tuesday, September 14th, 2010

by Jeff Parness, Founder and Chairman, The New York Says Thank You Foundation

Nine years ago, terrorists might have taken away from us one day — 9/11.

But over the weekend, Americans showed who we are and what we are made of.

We are a resilient and a compassionate Nation.

Let us never forget.

Last weekend, hundreds of volunteers with New York Says Thank You Foundation helped rebuild the tornado ravaged community of Mena, Arkansas.

We rebuilt three homes and a community center in a weekend.

As we get farther away from 9/11 – our volunteer projects to honor the sense of kindness that united our Nation on this National Day of Service and Remembrance keeps  getting larger.

The nationwide restoration effort of The National 9/11 Flag featured on NBC Nightly News here, our upcoming 10th Anniversary project, and the release of the New York Says Thank You film in 2011 that will inspire millions of young people and parents that a 5-year-old boy’s idea can grow into a national movement and teach generations of children about 9/11 through the filter of kindness and humanity all illustrate that we have only just begun.

Keep the spirit of service alive.

Share the story with your friends, family, and colleagues.

Sponsor A Stitch in the National 9/11 Flag or Nominate a Service Hero or make a donation to support our continuing work by clicking here.

We are committed to keep going.

From one day of terror, a Generation of Kindness.

That is our new goal.

“Volunteers help keep alive all that is the best in America.”

– ABC World News Tonight 9/11/09

President Obama and VP Biden join HandsOn Network in 9-11 Day of Remembrance and Service

Monday, September 13th, 2010

"Volunteer"

Friends,

"Obama Volunteering"This past weekend, Americans across the nation demonstrated the compassion, resilience, and unity that marked the way our citizens rallied together after September 11th nine years ago. For HandsOn Network, it was a day of extraordinary service, bringing people together, in unity, to help their communities. Here are just a few of the many highlights:

President Obama, paint roller in hand, energetically joined 80 other volunteers at our affiliate, Greater DC Cares, as they refurbished Ron Brown Middle School and sewed quilts for children whose parents are serving in the military overseas.

Vice President Joe Biden, his wife Dr. Jill Biden, and American Idol winner Jordin Sparks packed military care packages planned by MyGoodDeed and our affiliate New York Cares.

At the Volunteer Center of Southern Nevada, the Helping Heroes Project focused on assisting at-risk and homeless veterans, partnering with U.S. Vets, a local nonprofit that provides housing, job training and counseling.

In Olympia, Washington, hosted by the Volunteer Center of Lewis, Mason, and Thurston counties, hundreds of volunteers and their families shared a giant potluck in the blocked-off streets of the state capitol, and reflected on their service and remembrance of those lost on 9-11.

HandsOn Charlotte, N.C., managed projects for shelters, schools, and parks, and encouraged people, through an editorial, to create their own personal ways of honoring the day.

Boston Cares used the anniversary to launch a new program that will train volunteers in disaster response.

HandsOn Jacksonville partnered with a local university and sent 150 college students to participate in service projects focusing on the environment, education, and poverty.

In Brooklyn, NY, as part of Fidelity Investments’ partnership with HandsOn Network, volunteers from Fidelity and the community revitalized a middle school, creating active play areas and redesigning the cafeteria and entry.

These stories of activation and unity are emblematic of a nation that continues to turn tragedy into compassion.

HandsOn Network was honored that President Obama and Vice President Biden joined hands with other volunteers in celebration of service on this day.  We look forward to continuing to tally the results and stories of this work in the coming weeks and to building upon the momentum of 9/11 as a Day of Service and Remembrance.

Yours in service,

Michelle Nunn
CEO, Points of Light Institute

The Heart of America

Sunday, September 12th, 2010

by Susan Morissette, Executive Director, Heart of America Quilt

In 1989 President Bush called on me.

“The old ideas are new again because they are not old, they are timeless: duty, sacrifice, commitment, and a patriotism that finds its expression in taking part and pitching in.”

In 2001 I began a quilt in the form of a US Flag that allowed children to express their concerns for victims of 9/11.

Over the years I found that it was not only our children that needed to feel helpful. Our Nation, in fact our world, needed that unity.

The little quilt my family started is now over an acre when displayed and near a ton of fabric. Former Governor Jeb Bush added a portion to this quilt along with hundreds of thousands of people around the world that have signed in unity to honor.

In 2002 a woman I had never met in person, nominated me for the Daily Point of Light Award. I received news I was selected while returning to Maine after a “Make a Difference Day” spent visiting survivors at the Pentagon.

I am not brave enough to serve in our Military. I will never wear my awards upon my chest but as a Daily Point of Light I wear my service on my heart. It is a constant knowledge that I have a sense of duty, sacrifice, commitment and patriotism.

This award has given me a pride and confidence to continue to serve and encourage others to do the same.

My volunteers receive recognition for their hard work with the Presidential Volunteer Service Awards and this year, I am honored to be nominated for the L’Oreal Women of Worth award for my work in creating the National Community Service Education Project.

For the past 9 years I have worked as volunteer executive director of what is now the worlds largest quilted US Flag. I continue to volunteer and serve for the same reason that the Point of Light Institute continues to be such a Point of Light. Unity for Mankind.When the chips are down, people come together. I have one acre of visual proof. The guidance of POLI helps people unite for the common purpose to help mankind. It has become our light house.

I have mentioned a few things this evening- Make a Difference Day, Daily Point of Light Award, Presidential Volunteer Service Awards, L’Oreal Woman of Worth Award and my story. They all have one thing that united them in the common purpose to help mankind- the Points of Light Institute.

I am one of many thousand points of light.

Thank you.

God bless you all, and God Bless America.

Reach Across Differences

Saturday, September 11th, 2010

"volunteer"By Reverend Mark Farr, Faith-Based Initiatives Director, HandsOn Network

Nine years ago, our nation took the body blow that was 9/11.

We wondered who could be capable of such evil?

We were shaken to the core: was there, after all, a limit to diversity and tolerance?

And yet, when we all stood up again, we looked around to see a country big enough to absorb even this, and still embrace each other.

It was as if E Pluribus Unum itself had come to life.

It was amazing.

On that day, I saw the smoke from the Pentagon, burning hot and black and hideous, from my office window.

I still remember my first reaction was to go down there and pull anyone I could from that place.

No one was asking about ethnicity or the faith of those who were saved—or those who died.

We still live in the same country. The same people, and the same spirit is ours, same as nine years back: Christians and Muslims and Hindus and atheists and Jews and left and right and all of us.

The call and the response to serve is still with us, perhaps stronger now.

For us as Americans, from the founding of our country, service runs in our bloodstream. In service, we demonstrate our unity and rise above our differences for a greater good.

So, here’s how I put it together now, nine years on. The commemoration of this day, through civic engagement, more than any other day, unites us as a nation. It tells each one of us that life is fragile, each one precious, no matter our personal beliefs.

It speaks to us about courage, about how love of country sometimes turns, uninvited, into an act of service: a boy in a firefighter’s arms, a blood drive, a simple embrace of someone not at all like me. It tells us that we are a people with common ground.

So—speaking now as a first generation immigrant—God bless America.

I believe that service is a unique vehicle, not only to do good—but to connect.

I believe that this day expresses our oneness. I believe that to serve is to express love of country, and love for humanity.

Even though I may never be called to the self-sacrifice of that terrible day, what better way do I have to express tolerance, diversity, and understanding than through civic service?

What better way to reach across differences than to actually find a service project with Americans who look or talk or believe nothing like me?

I welcome your own thoughts and responses. And for each of us, it is our challenge to find an appropriate way to embrace all the meanings of this day.

I hope service plays a part."volunteer"

Related Posts:

Remembering 9/11 by Giving Back

Repair The World by Leah Koenig

Remembering 9/11 by Giving Back

September 11, Day of Service & Remembrance

What NOT to do on 9/11

Day of Remembrance

Volunteer for the 9/11 Day of Service

Don’t Let it Be Just Another Day

Reflections on 9/11

Day of Service with Jersey Cares

Reflections on 9/11

Friday, September 10th, 2010

"volunteer"By, Meg Moloney, Senior Director, Programs, New York Cares

I was at the New York Cares office in Union Square on the morning of 9/11. Like many others in NYC, as word spread we went outside to see what was going on. We looked down Broadway and saw people coming north as the second tower fell in the distance. The subways were closed, downtown became a “frozen zone”, and there was nothing to do but break into groups and walk home.

As my colleagues and I crossed the Williamsburg Bridge, we talked to each other and to total strangers, trying to make sense of events. It was a hot day. When we got to the Brooklyn side of the bridge, a small group of New Yorkers handed cups of water from the back of a pick-up truck to people trying to get home. This simple gesture brought relief to many and even tears to some. As I approached the impromptu aid station I remembered how 10 years before there had been serious racial tensions and violence not far from that spot. A lot had changed since 1991 and it was heartening to see residents from every part of the neighborhood working together to distribute water to the diverse and ragtag river of people walking by. Everyone seemed to feel a sense of togetherness about the experience. It made a world of difference to those of us with long walks still ahead and helped us put one foot in front of the other and keep going.

By the next day one thing was clear, the spontaneous goodwill of handing out water was not an anomaly. New Yorkers and people around the country – and the world – were responding to 9/11 by asking “what can I do to help.” New York Cares’ phones rang off the hook. Thousands of people came to us to volunteer—saying over and over that they wanted to find a way to do something positive in response to the tragedy. Many thousands of New Yorkers offered to help, as did people from California and Texas, and even Australia and Brazil.

In the days and weeks that followed we coordinated tens of thousands of volunteers around the city. They packed donated supplies for relief workers, prepared food at aid stations, and stood cheering at “Point Thank You”—a place just north of Ground Zero where volunteers let weary relief workers coming off their shifts know how grateful we were for their extraordinary efforts. In fact, it seemed everyone involved kept thanking each other—volunteers thanked first responders—first responders thanked volunteers. In the midst of unfathomable sadness, countless acts of generosity gave us strength.

I still work for New York Cares. I love working at an organization that makes it possible for New Yorkers to volunteer, to care for each other, and to make the city stronger. I am so proud that one of our first and strongest reactions to that tragic day was to help each other. It’s something I hope we never forget.

Change Points: The 9/11 National Day of Service and Remembrance

Wednesday, September 8th, 2010

Friends,

September 11, 2001 is remembered in the hearts of Americans as a day of national tragedy. But, that is not the only way it is remembered. The terrorist attacks also created a time of unparalleled national unity.

The power of that unity has become The 9/11 National Day of Service and Remembrance, a day for people to rekindle the energy, passion and connectivity experienced after the attacks. The day is spearheaded by MyGoodDeed.org, in partnership with HandsOn NetworkThe Corporation for National and Community Service, and the 9/11 Memorial.

The impact created from this one unified day of service cannot be underestimated. Last year 5 million Americans commemorated 9/11 by volunteering. I encourage you to take some time on this nationwide day of remembrance and make positive change happen in your community. You can locate a charitable cause or volunteer project by logging on to 911dayofservice.org.

Through 911dayofservice.org’s unique web hub, you can connect with other Americans who want to give back and become part of a powerful and positive legacy. The 9/11 National Day of Service and Remembrance: make it your way of showing how a day that began with tragedy brought a country closer together.

Yours in service,

Michelle Nunn
CEO, Points of Light Institute

Turning Tragedy into Something Positive

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010

"disaster relief"by Jay S. Winuk, Co-founder, Vice President, MyGoodDeed, 9/11 National Day of Service and Remembrance, President, Winuk Communications, Inc.

Somewhere along the way, we all face tragedy in our lives. Few are spared. People handle tragedies, though, in different ways. I often marveled at but was somewhat puzzled by those who found ways to turn personal tragedy into something positive. But now I understand.

My life changed forever on that sunny September 11 morning in 2001. My brother Glenn Winuk, a partner at the large law firm Holland & Knight LLP, was murdered by the terrorists who attacked our nation by flying planes into the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center in New York. Situated just a block and a half from the site, Glenn helped evacuate his law offices, then raced toward the South Tower to participate in the rescue effort. He died when that building collapsed. Glenn’s partial remains were recovered about six months later, a borrowed medic bag by his side.

For almost 20 years Glenn was a volunteer firefighter and EMT in our home town of Jericho, NY. He had also served as a fire commissioner and as an officer of Engine Company 2, and was highly decorated. Specially certified in building collapse rescue training, no one was more prepared to race into those towering infernos than my kid brother, dead at 40.

Firefighters are a special breed. We all know that. Not everyone has what it takes to do what they choose to do for the rest of us. What struck me, always, about Glenn and any other firefighters I’ve met along the way, is their absolute passion for the job. They simply love it. Despite all the risks, all the hard work, all the uncertainly about their fate, they just love it. It’s quite extraordinary, really.

What amazes me most about firefighters, volunteer and non-volunteer alike, is that they do what they do for people they do not know. And that is indeed impressive, given the risks they face. Many of us help others, but most do so without risk to life and limb.

Glenn lived his life in service to others – not just as a firefighter, but also as an attorney and an all-around good guy. After he died, I gave a lot of thought to what I could do to most appropriately honor him.

When my friend and colleague David Paine called from California a few months after the attacks to tell me about his idea, it was as if it was scripted. “Let’s work together to make 9/11 a national day of service,” David suggested, so that people will never forget how good people of the world responded when our nation was wounded. And off we were.

Today, after more than eight years of advocacy by the organization we founded called, MyGoodDeed, 9/11 is federally designated as a National Day of Service and Remembrance. This, thanks to the hard work of many in the 9/11 community; a wealth of corporate, nonprofit and other supporters, including Points of Light Institute and HandsOn Network; and the U.S. Congress and President Barack Obama, who signed this bi-partisan legislation into law in April 2009.

"volunteer"Engaging in service or good deeds on the anniversary each year in honor of those who perished or rose to help is truly an extraordinary phenomenon. Millions of people from all 50 states and countries all over the world now mark September 11 in service to others, with acts small and large. The ways that people participate are countless, creative and meaningful. All who visit our web site at www.911dayofservice.org can connect with and support charitable causes in numerous ways, as well as post their own personal good deeds. There’s nothing quite like it.

And this summer, with the help of some terrific partners, we launched a one-of-a-kind free online education curriculum so that grade school students everywhere can learn the lessons of 9/11, including about how the tragedy inspired generosity and good deeds. The program helps facilitate the teachers’ and students’ own good deeds in their communities, and thousands have already signed on.

As the ninth, and then the 10th, anniversary of 9/11 approach, I’m reminded as I am always this time of year about the millions who stepped forward to help in the face of tragedy for months after the attacks.  Not just the highly trained first responders like Glenn, but people from all walks of life, regardless of age, sex, religion, ethnicity, economic status, geographic location, political preference and other factors which frequently separate us.  Then, we were one people, and surely we can be that way more often — not just on 9/11 but throughout the year and throughout the years.

So go visit our web site at www.911dayofservice.org. Sign on to do a good deed and encourage others to do the same. Make a difference in someone’s life by turning tragedy into something positive. Thank you!

How to Use Social Media to Remember 9/11

Monday, August 30th, 2010

by ,  HandsOn Network

Are you willing to be an online ambassador for volunteerism?

Will you leverage your social networks to encourage your readers, followers and friends to memorialize the victims, survivors and heroes of the attacks of 9/11 through A National Day of Service and Remembrance?

Here are a few ways we can do it:

Using Facebook:

You can spread the word by asking your Facebook friends to get involved and to add their names to the growing list of individuals and organizations pledging to volunteer in observance of 9/11.  Share the link to the official 9/11 National Day of Service web site (http://911dayofservice.org/).  You can also lead by example.  Invite your Facebook friends to join you at a volunteer project.

Using Twitter

The hashtag for 9/11 as A National Day of Service is #911DAY.   Spread the word about the day of service by tweeting about it and sharing the link to the official 9/11 as A National Day of Service site (http://911dayofservice.org/).  You can ask your followers to volunteer – on their own or with you!  Share the details of your volunteer project with your followers. (If you mention , I’ll see your tweet, and retweet it or )

Using A Blog

If you’re a blogger, consider writing a post about 9/11 as a Day of Service. What you remember most about 9/11/01?  What images stand out for you? Why do you believe in honoring the victims, survivors and heroes through service? How will you take part in the Day of Service and Remembrance? (Here’s a sample 9/11 blog post: https://handsonblog.org/?p=2731)

You might want to include a call to action for your readers, such as:

–> Ask them to pledge to serve via a link to the official 9/11 Day of Service page (http://911dayofservice.org/)

–> Or, if you think folks might want to plan their own project, you can share a link to HandsOn’s guide to organizing a service project.  (http://www.handsonnetwork.org/files/resources/HON_Vol_Leader_Guide_FINAL.pdf)

If you send me a link to your blog post, I’ll link to it from https://HandsOnBlog.org.

Using YouTube:

Consider creating a video about why you think the 9/11 Day of Service is important. You coul answer the blogging questions above on video, upload it to You Tube, and share it with your social networks. If you send me a link to your video and I’ll link to it from https://HandsOnBlog.org

Related Content:

Feel free to use the official 9/11 Day of  Service Image:

You can add it to your blog or website with this HTML code:

http://911dayofservice.org“>

You can also embed or share either of these 9/11 Day of Service and Remembrance videos:

Just Another Day

Finally, do something creative – whatever works for you!

For example, you could offer to do something wacky if  X number of your friends, fans or readers pledge to serve.

You could challenge your friends – “If 20 people sign up, I’ll… (insert your wacky thing)!” — Shave your head? –Perform “All the Single Ladies” on You Tube?  Only you can say…

If you’re planning your own project – try using eventbrite, meetup or VolunteerSpot to get the event organized.  If you need to raise money for your project, give Crowdrise a try.

Do you know anyone else who might like to use social media to spread the word and get others involved? Why not share this post with them?

Thanks for your using social media for social good, for helping to promote volunteerism online and for making the September 11th National Day of Service & Remembrance a success!

Want to receive e-mail updates on how to use social media to encourage an online volunteer movement?  Let me know and I’ll add you to my list.  Contact me at .

Related Posts:

Repair The World by Leah Koenig