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No Evil Project - Show that people aren't defined by their labels.

Brown-eyed Stereotypes Redefined

Displaying 11 - 20 of 28

Vivienne

Fitchburg, MA
United States
Tell Us Your Good Deed: 
My friend is an old man and he got scared from having a stroke. I held his hand until the ambulance came to take him to the hospital and I made him a card to feel better.
Why are you participating?: 

I wanted it to be hanged up

Marcus

Tell Us Your Good Deed: 
I helped build an orphanage for over 200 children in La Gonâve, Haiti. I volunteered through an organization called Extollo and they connected me to an organization called Okipe that made the whole thing possible
Why are you participating?: 

It was what my friends were doing.

Heather

MA
Estados Unidos
Tell Us Your Good Deed: 
Leading by example in teaching my students how to engage in random acts of kindness.
Why are you participating?: 

Labels can hurt deeply, or they can build confidence and shape one's sense of identity, if interpreted in a way that makes an individual feel good about who there are.

Marrie

Worcester, MA
United States
Tell Us Your Good Deed: 
I helped somebody when they fell and scraped their knee and I love my friends. They are generous, they are sweet and they care very much about me.
Why are you participating?: 

I don't like labels. One time at the park a boy said, "Ha ha brown girl, brown girl. I am white" and that made me upset and sad.

Gerri

PA
United States
Tell Us Your Good Deed: 
I enjoy collecting new and useable items for the homeless, elderly, and young moms who need assistance.
Why are you participating?: 

Good deeds keep us human and connected. Promoting good deeds is a wonderful way to spread God's love in the world.

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