In his historic “I Have a Dream” speech, King said, “We can never be satisfied as long as our children are stripped of their adulthood and robbed of their dignity…” Today, those words might apply to any child living in poverty and forced either into homelessness, or any family spending so much on housing that their children suffer in their nutrition, their education, their ability to access healthcare, and their opportunities to build the brighter futures most of us take for granted.
King pointed to the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution as great symbols of our country. He declared that in those documents, the “architects of our Republic” wrote a promissory note to every American that all of us would be “guaranteed the unalienable rights of life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness.” But for many Americans, that promissory note is a check that comes back stamped, “insufficient funds.”
Martin Luther King called on us to seek justice for all of God’s children, and one of the best ways for justice to take hold is by giving all of God’s children a solid foundation to build on – the foundation of a stable, secure, affordable home for them and their families.
According to a 2012 study by the Urban Institute, when a child lives in an unstable housing situation, school changes increase, as do school absenteeism and behavioral problems. In that environment, test scores go down, graduation rates decrease, the likelihood of attending any college decreases, future earnings decline, and the test scores for other students decreases. The study showed that when children live in affordable housing, every single one of those negative trends is reversed.
The benefits don’t stop there, the study also showed that quality, affordable housing can increase access to amenities, reduce crime, improve access to transportation, increase access to support services, and enhance a families opportunity to grow wealth – all critical components of helping children escape the chains of poverty and improving the quality of life for everyone in our communities.
Twin Cities Habitat continues to work to make that dream a reality for more children by helping their families gain access to quality, affordable, stable homes, but we can’t do it without you. When you volunteer, or donate, or sponsor, you are participating in bringing King’s dream to life for more people.
Martin Luther King spoke to mobilize a nation to change and fully live into the promises the “architects of our Republic” made. He spoke to make it possible for everyone to cash that “promissory note.” At Twin Cities Habitat, our goals are more modest. Our hope, our dream, is that you will take a few minutes and commit to volunteer on a project, then donate a few dollars to help bring the dream to life. Doing so would be a fitting tribute to the legacy of Martin Luther King, Jr., and a step toward fulfilling the promise of our nation.