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ROCK Solid Change
by Shuka Kalantari
San Francisco Downtown Magazine
February 2007
Mention of SF's Visitacion Valley often conjures
up bleak images of poverty and crime. Scratch deeper
than the surface and a neighborhood progressing towards
development, community, and education is revealed. Curt
Yagi is a prime mover of this transformation. In 1998,
seeking opportunities to serve the community, Curt volunteered
as a soccer coach for Real Options for City Kids (ROCK),
a non-profit working with 6-17 year olds through a combination
of in-school and after-school programs.
"Still, I was unsure of the actual impact that
I was having on the kids, "Curt confesses. Then
one day Curt broke his leg. Unable to coach the kids,
he went back to visit them after a few months. "It
just so happened that the children were playing soccer
right then...next thing I knew, 40 kids were running
at me with full speed," laughs Curt. "I was
trying to shield my broken leg from the children when,
out of nowhere, the smallest girl in the group appeared
from the middle of the crowd. She held her arms out
to the sides, holding everybody back. I realized that
she was protecting me, and that if this little girl
was brave enough to protect me because she cared
that much then maybe I was making a difference
in these kids lives."
Nine years later, Curt Yagi is the Executive Director
of ROCK. Providing innovative outlets for Visitacion
Valley's youth, ranging from tutoring programs to outdoor
camping trips, ROCK gives children positive role models.
"In neighborhoods like this, low income and high
violence neighborhoods, you need role models. When your
role models are bad people, you get caught up in that
stuff," says Curt. "We are here to stop that
cycle." Not only does ROCK aim to stop such negative
cycles, it also creates better ones: Visitacion Valley's
high school students who have been affiliated with ROCK
since childhood often come back, volunteering their
time with the younger kids. "It makes sense to
them to help their own communities out," Curt explains.
Visit www.rocksf.org or call 333-4001 for information
on how to volunteer.
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