ilìf'(Jortlanò (©beeruer Page AIO February 22, 2006 BLACK HISTORY MONTH and the American Experience Finding Rewardsin Old Town co n tin u ed fr o m F ro n t Still, T hom as has found a way to balance his outreach with som e business and keep his entrepreneurial instincts sharp. He devotes one day a week to his business-consulting firm W P&C Services, Inc He also has developed a partnership between five churches including hisow n, N E C om m unity Fellowship. Thom as is also involved with the O ffice of Neighborhtxxl Involvem ent and the Portland Police Bureau, w orking to identify a group ot fam iliar faces that cycle through the police d ep artm ent and the m ission. T he bureau brainstorm ed strategies to end the cycle of these repeat offenders, dubbing them "Old T ow n’s 35 Most W anted." Thom as has earned the trust o f many offend­ ers by simply talking with them, offering them fixxl and clothing. He said he purposely leaves out the Bible lessons and hellfire sermons, focusing instead on "grace-based" ministry. If we can minister to them in their brokenness, he said, they'll know who is there to help them when no one else will. In his partnership with staff and volunteers, Thom as has realized that addiction d o esn 't discrim inate based on class. After encounter­ ing addiction and grief in hisow ncom m unity, he earned certifications in addictions counseling. He plans to start a G enesis Process program that he says will help others in the com m unity and churches tackle the spiritual, em otional, physical and mental aspects o f people’s lives, whatever the addiction. “People do n 't realize that even healthy people have lingering addictions," he said. "M y vision is to take what w e' re teaching in the program and photo by I saiah B ouie /T he P ortland O bserver offer it to our com m unities and churches who Portland Rescue Mission plays an important role in Old Town, a major need healing.” hub for the city's homeless. The Oregon Historical Society sits along the downtown Parks Blocks. Inside, it's not difficult to spend a day exploring the exhibits or researching archives. Local history can also be explored by visiting much o f the museum s collection online at www.0HS.org. photo by I saiah B oi ie /T he P ortland O bserver Where Black History Never Ends co n tin u ed fr o m F ront community, andenvironment. Creator W il­ liam Toll “exam ines the tensions between social classes and ethnic groups, and the subsequent em ergence o f residential pat­ terns and a governm ent.” A section titled Focus on Oregon H is­ tory “provides teachers, students, and the general public a sense o f the diverse people and events that com prise the his­ tory o f O regon.” The A frican A m erican History Page is an excellent place to explore the experi­ ence o f the state’s first black citizens. The co llectio n begins in O re g o n 's younger days, painting a bleak picture of racial injustice on account o f early set­ tlers. Subsequently, the site celebrates an em erging African Am erican com m unity w ho knew they m ust earn basic rights b e fo re g a in in g c o m m u n ity re sp e c t. Beatrice Morrow Cannady ( 1890-1974) was am ong the state's early, bravç A frican Am erican arrivers. Information about Asian Pacific his­ tory follow s the first large group o f Chinese im m igrants to arrive in the Pacific Northwest in the early 1850s. A focus on w om en’s history in O r­ egon features Abigail Scott Duniway, s is te r to D a ily O re g o n ia n editor Harvey Scott. D uniw ay was a n o v e lis t, n e w s p a p e r p u b lis h e r , teacher, pioneer, milliner, and suffrag­ ist. O H S also has a bilingual exhibit. O ur W ays: History and C ulture o f M exicans in O regon. The site docu­ ments the M exican presence in O r­ egon, dating back to the Spanish ex ­ plorers o f the 1600s. 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