"It's a matter of reading between the lines...See what
the real truth is about the world. If you like yourself, you won't want to hurt
anyone else."
After retiring from her 40-year profession as an LAUSD
school teacher, Millicent "Mama" Hill continued to educate and
empower the at-risk children who needed the most guidance in her community. Her
affable demeanor and talent for teaching, right from her living room, have made
her home a place of solace and peace in one of the toughest neighborhoods in
Los Angeles.
Ms. Hill taught in many different capacities during her
educational career: she was an English teacher, a counselor, and a mentor to
many students. She was the driving force in creating and popularizing a special
museum dedicated to Martin Luther King, Jr. at Crenshaw High School. She prided
herself on making her students responsible in the classroom as well as in life;
by giving her most troublesome students the most responsibility, she taught
empathy and respect to students who had never known those concepts before, and
they began to respect her back.
Despite her own success with troubled students, Ms. Hill
could not ignore the harsh realities of the gang violence and social
deprivation that still infiltrated her teaching. During one moment of
reflection, she estimated that she had lost over 2,000 students to violent
death in her teaching career. Even after she retired from teaching, she dedicated
her life to mitigating the heartache and pain in her community through love and
compassion, right from her own home.
In 2001, realizing that so many youths and their parents had
no realistic venues to address the most distressing social and psychological
problems plaguing their community, Mama Hill opened up her own home and started
an after-school program. She provided one-on-one sessions with troubled
students and parents, addressing every problem from gang violence to grief
counseling to suicide prevention. One-on-one sessions grew into group sessions,
and the people that Mama Hill counseled began to rely upon her as a cornerstone
of personal improvement and well-being. She now estimates that, as of the time
that she began "Mama Hill's Help," that she has saved as many
students as she had lost during her years of teaching.
Mama Hill plans to continue her outreach and leadership
programs as she has for the past several years, focusing especially on gang
prevention and intervention as well as voter registration outreach in the
community. She will continue to lead her new, weekly seminar on Black
History/Brown History/Life Skills every Tuesday in the following year.
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