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The
$4 million project is focused on helping at-risk youth.
It revolves around a six-acre campus in the Atlanta
suburb of Stone Mountain that includes an art gallery,
rehearsal area, offices, gift shop and a "peace
garden." There are plans to add a museum, community
meeting space and classrooms. A bronze statue of Tupac
will be unveiled in one of the peace garden's fountains
in September.
According
to Afeni's attorney, Dina LaPolt, who co-produced the
Oscar-nominated documentary "Tupac: Resurrection,"
about 80 percent of the center's cost came from the
foundation Afeni set up to receive proceeds from her
various Tupac albums, movies, DVDs and other projects.
The
idea for the center came from a sad chapter of Afeni's
history. As she bounced from New York City to Baltimore
to California, falling deeper into drugs and the Black
Panther movement, she enrolled young Tupac in several
arts schools and programs, where he honed the natural
musical and acting gifts that would make him a hip-hop
icon.
"Arts
can save children, no matter what's going on in their
homes," Afeni, 58, told Associated Press in a recent
interview. "I wasn't available to do the right
things for my son. If not for the arts, my child would've
been lost."
The
foundation has already hosted youth arts camps, focusing
mostly on poetry and theater, in the Atlanta area, where
some of Afeni's family lives. This is the first year
the campers will have a permanent site.
Celina
Nixon, who coordinates the camps, used to attend them
as a teenager. The 22-year-old said she had a lot of
things going against her in high school -- namely that
she had a daughter at 15.
Because
attending the camp taught her to overcome setbacks,
she learned to be mature and view the world through
a new perspective -- that of a teenage mother -- rather
than seeing her plight as a millstone.
"We
had to write a letter to ourselves about where we wanted
to be," Nixon said of her camp days. "I wanted
to be able to make a difference in young girls' lives
and with the youth, period."
The
camp is for 12- to 18-year-olds, so when Nixon graduated
from high school she was no longer allowed to attend,
but Afeni offered her an internship with the foundation.
Nixon
basically taught herself management techniques, and
her background in drama and chorus lent itself to helping
run the foundation. Afeni said she hopes the camps will
continue to churn out these kind of success stories.
"I
learned that I can't save the world, but I can help
a child at a time," Afeni said, adding that it
was all made possible by her son. "God created
a miracle with his spirit. I'm all right with that."
Conspiracies
abound about Tupac's unsolved shooting, but they're
all a waste of time to Afeni.
"We
decided to deal with the living. This is justice for
me," she said. "I need to do what God has
put in front of me to do, and it ain't trying to figure
out who killed Tupac."
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