NACA Senior Quincy Walker Receives Prestigious 2019 Sargent Shriver Youth Warrior Award

Marguerite Casey Foundation introduces the 2019 Sargent Shriver Youth Warriors Against Poverty awardees, honored for their vision, passion, and dedication to improving the lives of families in their communities.

SEATTLE – Marguerite Casey Foundation presented 20 young community leaders with the Sargent Shriver Youth Warriors Against Poverty Leadership Award, in honor of their vision, passion and dedication to improving the lives of families in their communities. Each of the honorees received an award of $5,000 in recognition of their leadership.

This is the eighth year that Marguerite Casey Foundation has presented the Sargent Shriver Youth Warriors Against Poverty awards. The award is named for Sargent Shriver, who worked throughout his life to provide opportunities for people to lift themselves out of poverty. Shriver is the architect of the War on Poverty and visionary leader of Head Start, Peace Corps, Job Corps and VISTA.

Each of the 20 Sargent Shriver Youth Warriors has shown resolve and courage in standing up for those who are often neglected by society: the homeless, immigrant families, members of the LGBTQ+ community, and students and youth, among others. This year’s honorees are proactive in their efforts to encourage youth civic engagement, reform juvenile justice, education and healthcare systems, advocate for environmental justice, organize for immigrant and undocumented communities and more.

Luz Vega-Marquis, CEO and President of Marguerite Casey Foundation, said of the honorees: “This year’s Youth Warriors prove to us all that you can make a difference in your community at any age. We are so inspired by these organizers and their willingness to make change in the areas that affect them personally and affect their families. These are young people who come from what are sometimes difficult circumstances and bloom into active leaders in their community, helping to reshape those communities and our society overall. We’re so proud to see the legacy of Sargent Shriver continue on in each of them.”

Quincy Walker, 17

Nominated by Native Voice Network

Quincy Walker, a junior at Native American Community Academy (NACA) in Albuquerque, New Mexico, is dedicated to serving his multi-faceted community and representing his Black, Japanese and Mexican-Irish cultures with pride. Quincy lives in Isleta Pueblo, New Mexico, and he has interned with several local, regional and national organizations, including NACA’s Hiyupo Alliance and Obama Foundation’s My Brother’s Keeper Alliance (MBKA). He supports many nonprofit and community-led organizations and is an active member of the ongoing MBKA Youth Advisory Council. He also supports the City of Albuquerque’s work to provide resources for boys and young men of color. Quincy has a personal passion for fighting domestic poverty through community service and organizing. He recently organized an initiative in his community to provide water to those experiencing homelessness, and he plans to expand his “Hydrating the Homeless” project to include new partners, as well as additional resources and provisions including fresh fruit.

For a full list of awardees please visit -

https://caseygrants.org/who-we-are/inside-mcf/marguerite-casey-foundation-announces-2019-sargent-shriver-youth-warriors-against-poverty/

Albuquerque Boys and Young Men of Color Cohort to Kick Off the Opening Ceremony at the New Mexico United Soccer Game this Weekend 

For Immediate Release

For more information contact 

Jessica Helen Lopez 

lopez@nacainspiredschoolsnetwork.org 

(c)505.933.2045

Albuquerque Boys and Young Men of Color Cohort to Kick Off the Opening Ceremony at the New Mexico United Soccer Game this Weekend 

Albuquerque Group is an Obama Foundation My Brother’s Keeper Alliance Impact Award Winner for its efforts to support young men and boys of color in the Albuquerque community.

Albuquerque, NM. On Sunday, September 1, 2019, an Albuquerque Boys and Young Men of Color (BYMOC) Alliance will kick off the New Mexico United soccer game at Isotopes Park by running the home team's flag during the opening ceremony of the game. 

At 4 pm, the group, comprised of BYMOC from the Native American Community Academy, La Plazita Institute, NM Dream Team, Cultivating Coders, Together for Brothers and their partners from the City of Albuquerque will run the NM United flag across the field in a show of community support, youth advocacy and leadership, celebration of intersectional cultural identities, and their ongoing commitment to restorative justice practices that work to uplift their neighborhoods. 

In the Fall of 2018, the NACA Inspired Schools Network was awarded the prestigious Obama Foundation’s My Brother’s Keeper Alliance Impact Award. One of nineteen organizations across ten states, including Puerto Rico, NACA Inspired Schools Network (NISN), ABQ Community Partners, and the City of Albuquerque, Office of the Mayor, were recognized by MBKA as a national model committed to reducing youth violence, grow effective mentorship programs, and measurably improve the lives of boys and young men of color. 

The Notah Begay III Foundation (NB3), via their programming for, “Native Youth on the Move,” in conjunction with Nike and Seven (N7), invited the Albuquerque BYMOC to attend and conduct the opening ceremonial flag run. This is the 11th cohort of non-profit organizations which NB3 has funded to attend the NM United home games and kick off the match. 

NB3 Community Organizer, Leroy “Buster” Silva (Laguna Pueblo) says, “The ceremonial flag run is about prayer, physical health and mental wellness. It is done in the spirit of movement. We know that the health of our Indigenous and people of color communities begins with our kids. Our health is our wealth.” 

NISN’s newly appointed Community Director (a position funded by the MBKA Impact Award) and former Lead “Uncle” of the NACA Hiyupo Boys Alliance, Mahpiya Black Elk says, “MBKA work is necessary because too often our boys and young men of color are pushed aside and forgotten. High dropout rates and over-incarceration affect them and our communities. The soccer game is a fun way for our partners to come together and build community and promote systemic change to support our BYMOC. Our young men want to reshape the ways our city thinks of them and the way they visualize themselves as community leaders.” 

New Mexico United, the state’s professional soccer franchise, articulates a mission statement that conveys a passion for community and provides a platform that brings New Mexicans together for a unique sporting experience, celebrating the unity and excitement inherent in world-class soccer. NM United will compete against the Orange County Soccer Club this Sunday, September 1, 2019 at the Isotopes Field (1601 Avenida Cesar Chavez SE, 87106) at 4 pm. For more information about NISN, please email blackelk@nacainspiredschoolsnetwork.org. Also visit, http://www.nb3foundation.org/ and https://hiyupo.nacainspiredschoolsnetwork.org/.

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My Brother’s Keeper was not about me, it was not about my presidency… It’s about all of us working together. Because ensuring that our young people can go as far as their dreams and hard work will take them is the single most important task that we have as a nation.” -- President Barack Obama

Please visitNISN at http://www.nacainspiredschoolsnetwork.org/


Our community partners are listed here: 

My Brother’s Keeper ABQ, https://obamawhitehouse.archives.gov/my-brothers-keeper