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Birmingham high school students create sweet treats for healing 60 years after church bombing

Birmingham high school students create sweet treats for healing 60 years after church bombing
ON THIS 60TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE BOMBING. WELL, STUDENTS AT WINONA HIGH SCHOOL ARE ALSO FINDING CREATIVE WAYS TO COMMEMORATE THIS ANNIVERSARY. THAT鈥橲 RIGHT. HANDING OUT NEARLY 100 FRESHLY BAKED SWEET POTATO PIES. IT鈥橲 ALL PART OF THIS WEEK鈥橲 CONFERENCE FOCUSING ON THE IMPACT THAT DAY HAD ON CIVIL RIGHTS FOREVER. DEBBIE 米兰体育13鈥橲, ERIN LEWELLEN IS LIVE FOR US IN BIRMINGHAM RIGHT NOW. AND ERIN, YOU GOT THE CHANCE TO SPEAK WITH SOME OF THE ORGANIZERS BEHIND THE PIES. YEAH, GUYS, SHERI, THESE STUDENTS HAVE BEEN IN THE KITCHEN WHIPPING UP THESE SWEET TREATS ALL WEEK. AND IT鈥橲 ALL PART OF A WEEK LONG CELEBRATION TO COMMEMORATE THE 16TH STREET BAPTIST CHURCH BOMBING. AND THESE STUDENTS SAY IT鈥橲 INSPIRING THEM TO CREATE CHANGE. SWEET POTATO PIES, MUCH MORE THAN JUST A HOLIDAY STAPLE. I FEEL LIKE IT WOULD JUST HELP THEM, LIKE COME TOGETHER AND LIKE, JUST BETTER, LIKE, RELATIONSHIPS AMONG THE PEOPLE. WINONA HIGH STUDENTS USING WHAT THEY鈥橵E LEARNED IN THE CLASSROOM TO HELP FOSTER CONVERSATIONS ABOUT BUILDING COMMUNITY WITH THERE IS A BOMB IN GILEAD CONFERENCE ATTENDEES. I FEEL LIKE I PUT MY LITTLE SPLASH IN IT. I JUST MADE IT LIKE THE RECIPE. AND IF I FELT LIKE SOMETHING WAS OFF, YOU KNOW, PUT A LITTLE EXTRA OR A LITTLE BIT. SENIOR MCKENZIE MASON SAID, WHIPPING UP SWEET TREATS WAS A FUN EXPERIENCE. WE DID OUR THING, BUT SHE AND OTHER STUDENTS SAY THESE PIES ARE MUCH BIGGER THAN JUST A CLASS PROJECT. BUT IT鈥橲 DEFINITELY A TRAGIC TO LOSE. YOU KNOW, FOR, YOU KNOW, KIDS OF, YOU KNOW, BECAUSE THEY ALSO HAD PARENTS. SO IT鈥橲 ALSO VERY TRAGIC, YOU KNOW, TO SEE THEM GO THROUGH THAT AND TO SEE, YOU KNOW, EVERYBODY AROUND THE CITY JUST BE INVOLVED IN THAT, TAKING A SLICE OF HISTORY TO PAY TRIBUTE TO TRAILBLAZERS WHO GAVE THEIR LIVES TO CHANGE THE COURSE OF HISTORY. WE GOT PEOPLE THAT WAS MARCHING. ON THE SIDEWALKS. WE WALK ON RIGHT NOW. SO IT鈥橲 KIND OF LIKE A LOT HAPPENED HERE. AND WE HAVE 16 BAPTIST WAS JUST DOWN THE STREET. SO THAT鈥橲 A LOT JUST TO GET IN YOUR CAR AND DRIVE BY WHAT WAS. BUT REBUILT. NOW, WE DID GET SOME MIXED REACTION FROM THE STUDENTS WHO WE TALKED TO THEM EARLIER TODAY. SOME SAID THEY WEREN鈥橳 REALLY SURE HOW THOSE PIES WERE GOING TO TASTE AND WHETHER OR NOT THEY WERE GOING TO BE WELL RECEIVED BY THOSE CONFERENCE ATTENDEES. BUT ONE THING IS FOR SURE, THEY DID HAVE A GREAT TIME MAKING THOSE PIES AND USING THEIR SKILLS IN TH
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Birmingham high school students create sweet treats for healing 60 years after church bombing
Nineteen Wenonah High School students made it their mission to create a sense of community. They handed out 100 fresh-baked sweet potato pies in remembrance of the 60th anniversary of the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing.The pies were served to attendees during this week鈥檚 鈥淭here is a Balm in Gilead鈥� conference keynote speech from Tony Evans focusing on the impact the day had on civil rights.鈥淚 feel like it would just help them come together and just better relationships among the people,鈥� Wenonah High junior Calvin Mitchell said.The students shared comfort food with the attendees to spark hard conversations about race and race relations. They used Rose McGee's recipe. She's a chef based in Minnesota who started the Sweet Potato Pie Coalition after the death of Mike Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, and even used the pies to create change after police brutality hit her community with the death of George Floyd. They were proud to show off what they learned in the classroom. 鈥淚 feel like I put my little splash in,鈥� Wenonah High senior McKenzii Mason said. 鈥淚 just made it like the recipe and if I felt like something was off, you know, I put a little extra in it.鈥滿ason said whipping up sweet treats was a fun experience, but she and other students said these pies are so much bigger than just a class project.鈥淚t鈥檚 definitely a tragedy to lose four kids because they also have parents,鈥� Mitchell said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 also very tragic to see them go through that and to see everybody around the city just be involved in it.鈥漈aking a slice out of history inspired the students to make change in their own communities 鈥� building on the progress made after six lives were unjustly taken.鈥淲e got people that were marching on the sidewalks we walk on right now,鈥� Mason said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 kind of like a lot happened here. We have 16 Street Baptist that鈥檚 just down the street, so that鈥檚 a lot. Just getting in your car driving by what was and what was rebuilt.鈥漌enonah High culinary arts teacher Diane Pilgram hopes the students learned more than just skills to use in the kitchen.鈥淵ou hope that they see the kindness that people have and they use that kindness because we know we need kindness around the school,鈥� she said. 鈥淲e need more kindness in the community, and to know that to get out and do something and what you can do may seem small, but it can make a big difference.鈥�

Nineteen Wenonah High School students made it their mission to create a sense of community. They handed out 100 fresh-baked sweet potato pies in remembrance of the 60th anniversary of the 16th Street Baptist Church bombing.

The pies were served to attendees during this week鈥檚 鈥淭here is a Balm in Gilead鈥� conference keynote speech from Tony Evans focusing on the impact the day had on civil rights.

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鈥淚 feel like it would just help them come together and just better relationships among the people,鈥� Wenonah High junior Calvin Mitchell said.

The students shared comfort food with the attendees to spark hard conversations about race and race relations. They used Rose McGee's recipe. She's a chef based in Minnesota who started the Sweet Potato Pie Coalition after the death of Mike Brown in Ferguson, Missouri, and even used the pies to create change after police brutality hit her community with the death of George Floyd. They were proud to show off what they learned in the classroom.

鈥淚 feel like I put my little splash in,鈥� Wenonah High senior McKenzii Mason said. 鈥淚 just made it like the recipe and if I felt like something was off, you know, I put a little extra in it.鈥�

Mason said whipping up sweet treats was a fun experience, but she and other students said these pies are so much bigger than just a class project.

鈥淚t鈥檚 definitely a tragedy to lose four kids because they also have parents,鈥� Mitchell said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 also very tragic to see them go through that and to see everybody around the city just be involved in it.鈥�

Taking a slice out of history inspired the students to make change in their own communities 鈥� building on the progress made after six lives were unjustly taken.

鈥淲e got people that were marching on the sidewalks we walk on right now,鈥� Mason said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 kind of like a lot happened here. We have 16 Street Baptist that鈥檚 just down the street, so that鈥檚 a lot. Just getting in your car driving by what was and what was rebuilt.鈥�

Wenonah High culinary arts teacher Diane Pilgram hopes the students learned more than just skills to use in the kitchen.

鈥淵ou hope that they see the kindness that people have and they use that kindness because we know we need kindness around the school,鈥� she said. 鈥淲e need more kindness in the community, and to know that to get out and do something and what you can do may seem small, but it can make a big difference.鈥�