Story Library
The stories below are brought to you by people who live or grew up in the city and believe in the power of stories to bring Bostonians together. In their free time, these story ambassadors go out into their neighborhoods and across the city to record the life experiences of people they might not otherwise know. Story by story, we're building community across a divided city.
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ESSENTIAL PEOPLE PROJECT · POP-UP STORY SHOPS · HOW WE GOT THROUGH· Amplify Black Voices
CEDRIC MASENGERE
Cedric Masengere, a manufacturing associate at Moderna, talks about the sense of purpose that comes with producing a vaccine during a pandemic.
LINDA BURSTON
"I was so beat down, she brought me to the nap room and gave me a bed and literally fed me because I couldn't feed myself. She made me feel good about myself."
CARL VICKERS
"I never swore at them or anything like that. But I gave them a growl. They called me the track star of Timilty School ‘cause I'd chase you down the corridor in a heartbeat."
ANNIE KINKEAD
"I've always been an activist. Even when we were growing up. I had somebody want to beat up my little girlfriend next door and I said, 'Boy, you hit her, you're going to have to hit me, too.'
DAN WILLIS
"I'm a hybrid. I don't wish it on anyone. It's lonely. But I don't know how to be anything else. I feel like that's my calling.”
STEVE COACHMAN
“In the public eyes, yeah, everybody says: “They’re a gang” or “They’re a crew.” But I always said it was a family.”
JUSTIN SPRINGER
"It’s embarrassing when someone has a fear of you just from the cover of your book. But she doesn’t know. If she had read some of them pages, we would probably have a lot of things similar.”
SAMANTHA ROSA
“When I started talking to them, and they started talking to me, and they got instantly used to my appearance and everything, and when they saw the artwork I was doing, they were quite surprised.”
JASMINE MAYS
"You know how you go through a phase and you dye your hair, or something, or you might try and be really out there? My family thought it was that, so they thought, 'Oh, yeah, she’s going through her little Muslim thing, you know.'"
SHAMAIAH TURNER
"Eventually I came to the conclusion that actually I can choose this place. I don’t have to be wandering. I can choose this as my home."
LEKISHA JOHNSON
"When people look at me, they’re like, 'Oh, well, you’re a happy person.' But I have to be happy, and I have to be strong, because I have kids growing up, you know? Even if I am in the projects, I still gotta be strong and keep a smile on my face."
FRANCISCO FERNANDEZ
"In salsa, it was a different atmosphere like I never felt before. The atmosphere is like, me moving in slow motion—I can actually see their faces, if they are smiling or not."
GREG WILLIAMS
"‘Mr. Williams, I need to see you.’Which meant you were in trouble for something. I mean, it’s the first day of school. I didn’t do anything. Why am I in trouble? Why does he want to see me?"
DENESHA COPELAND
"My phone rings, 6:30, 7 in the morning, people either asking me for word of the day, or some kind of inspirational word, or they talk to me about their problems. But that's just what I do right now. I'm there for people, in any way I can be."
INARI JADE HIGGINS BARRETT
11-year-old Inari Jade Higgins Barrett, bringing the house down with a song she wrote in the third grade. By her side is her father, Toussaint Liberator.
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