Youth Speaks Develops a New Generation of Voices for Bold Change
“It’s not the thoughts or the prayers.
It’s the actions
It’s how we stared down the barrel. Stared until
the barrel lowered until the kill counts
flew up and away.
Stared until the guns were put down…”
-From the poem “Futurescapes” about a future without gun violence. By Youth Speaks poet Jasmine Kapadia
Young people want more. They don’t just want to find their voice, they want to use that voice to make real, tangible change in the world.
Youth Speaks, a leader in youth art, civic and cultural education, and performance for over 25 years, is meeting this need by not only helping young people find and develop their artistic voice as writers, artists, and public speakers, but by also applying that voice to changing the public narrative. Their new innovative Power Lab program will pair young artists with researchers, movement organizers, and media partners to create artist-centered stories and solutions grounded in systems-change that will have far-reaching impacts.
“We see young people apply their voices in ways that are unlike any time before in history – shaping public discourse and expanding political will,” says Michelle “Mush” Lee, executive director of Youth Speaks. “It no longer takes years for a younger person in these times to realize that their ideas and voice can impact hundreds, thousands, and potentially millions, if you go viral.”
Youth Speaks has been one of the largest nonprofit organizations supporting youth poetry. Serving over 7,500 students annually in the Bay Area and 200,000 arts audiences virtually, their flagship Brave New Voices Youth Poetry Festival has been featured on HBO and their arts-based, public health models have been recognized by the World Health Organization and the National Institutes of Health.
Youth Speaks artists have leveraged culture and narrative-driven strategies to shift national conversation on youth incarceration, affordable housing, environmental justice, and health inequities and spurred changes in state policy. Their collaboration on an article on public housing in Richmond, California, with the Center for Investigative Reporting (now known as Reveal News), led to features on PBS NewsHour, in the San Francisco Chronicle, and eventually led to the closure and renovation of what was deemed one of the most decrepit housing projects in the nation. Their long-standing collaboration with University of California San Francisco’s Center for Vulnerable Populations has brought national awareness to the causes of health inequities like Type II Diabetes and led to prominent stories in The New York Times and The Journal of the American Medical Association.
Youth Speaks’ goal is bold: To create opportunities for youth to study public stories of today and speak on the issues that matter to our future – racial equity, ethics and AI, mental health, social media, and climate justice. And it’s never been more crucial as they are painfully aware of current trends censoring the young and people of color.
“Our job at Youth Speaks is to make sure that the histories of Black, Indigenous, Latine, Asian American, Pacific Islander, Arab people’s survival and resilience that are being systematically banned in schools and libraries across this country are never silenced, censored, erased, or that we never apologize for creating a space where young people of every walk of life can explore their own stories with remarkable truth and hope for a world none of us has seen but dream of,” says Lee. “To build a truly inclusive world is to build a world that is also shaped by young people.”
Youth Speaks
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415-255-9035
Executive Director: Michelle “Mush” Lee
Mission
We create spaces that challenge youth to amplify their voices as creators of societal change.
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I found Youth Speaks at age 15 and it contributed to my life in more ways than I could count or repay. Youth Speaks gave me a community of young artists, the performance opportunities of my dreams – the world’s best mentors and a toolkit for cultural change. Youth Speaks taught me creative career-building skills, confidence, and self-worth as a young person. I stayed at Youth Speaks until I was 23, when I began to travel as a full-time musician.
The Impact of Youth Voices: A New Generation of Public Poets Move Toward Civic Light
Youth Speaks’ Public Poets Fellowship is a new, innovative year-long narrative change and public speaking program for youth/young adults. The program is currently in Beta launch.
“I want to create art at Youth Speaks that contributes to making the kind of change so that no poet will have to write the poems I do,” says Youth Speaks alumni. “That’s the driving motivation of Public Poets.”
The Fellowship, which provides stipends of between $15,000 to $25,000 to each participant, will allow fellows to amplify their voices to be creators and leaders of change. $260,000 is needed by December to add up to four more fellowship seats (for a total of eight this year), while also building out key internal infrastructure.
Key Supporters
San Francisco Department
of Children, Youth & Their Families
William & Flora Hewlett Foundation
Battery Powered
(The Battery Club)
Barbara and Amos Hostetter
Lemonade, Inc.
Mayor’s Office of Housing
and Community Development,
City of San Francisco
The John D. and Catherine T.
MacArthur Foundation
California Arts Council
Crankstart
National Endowment for the Arts
Governor’s Office of Community
Partnerships and Strategic
Communications
The Hearst Foundation
Foundry10
Acton Family Giving
Hellman Foundation
Jenny Fan Raj and Nehal Raj
Golden State Warriors
Walter & Elise Haas Fund
Poetry Foundation