By Trennis Henderson
NEW YORK CITY — For Diega Cordova and Carmen Rodriguez, serving as WorldCrafts artisans with Graffiti 2 Works in New York City’s South Bronx has made a lasting impact in their lives.
The same is true for Gloria, and her mother, Maria, who are improving their English skills through one-on-one tutoring and mentoring at Graffiti 2 Works’ Adult Learning Center.
Both the WorldCrafts fair trade micro-enterprise and the Adult Learning Center, affiliated with the Christian Women’s Job Corps program of National Woman’s Missionary Union, are coordinated by Kerri Johnson, the founding director of Graffiti 2 Works. The ministry is part of Graffiti 2 Community Ministries which has had a presence in the Bronx since 2005.
From small-town USA to NYC
Kerri and her husband, Josh, along with their children, Paige and Noah, are transplants to New York from their hometown of Princeton, W.Va. The Johnsons were leading mission trips for college students to serve at Graffiti 2 at the same time that God was dealing with them about their personal call to missions.
While “small-town USA vs. New York City is extremely different,” Kerri said that within a few months, their family had relocated to the Bronx as Mission Service Corps workers. Josh has served at Graffiti 2 since 2011 as director of youth and recreation. Kerri, who initially served as the ministry’s office manager, said she sensed a burden from God to start Graffiti 2 Works a few years later to help meet practical needs in their neighborhood.
Celebrating “God’s perfect timing”
She initially launched the WorldCrafts effort with very limited sewing skills and experience. As she was evaluating how the program needed to be revamped, she struck up a conversation at a neighborhood farmers market with Diega Cordova, the mother of a student in Graffiti 2’s after school program.
Cordova “said she was looking for a job in home health but she was really a seamstress,” Kerri recalled. “Right from the start, I knew God had sent me Diega. … It was just God’s perfect timing.”
Cordova, a native of Honduras, has been living in the United States for almost 30 years. As Kerri shared her vision for a WorldCrafts artisan group, Cordova quickly agreed to join the effort.
Noting that she began sewing at age 16, Cordova was able to step in, streamline the sewing process and train new artisans who started with no sewing experience. Teaching her new co-workers how to sew aprons, bags, purses, lanyards and other products to market and sell through WorldCrafts, Cordova said, “I was very happy that they came and we joined to work together. It’s a wonderful program not only for us, but for the community.”
Fellow artisans Carmen Rodriguez readily agrees with Cordova’s assessment.
Rodriguez’s involvement in the close-knit WorldCrafts team echoes that of her co-workers. “I learned how to sew. I love it. It’s a good trade to know,” she pointed out. “Working with the women is great. We are our biggest supporters. We’re united here with each other.
“I feel more grounded ever since I started coming to Graffiti 2,” Rodriguez added. “They taught us how to pray and have faith. I heard a lot of things about the Bible I didn’t know before. I had a lot of questions and they answered the questions that I had.”
As the women work together in close quarters on a variety of sewing projects, “I just love it here,” she concluded. “Graffiti makes a big difference in the community. They invite anyone in and they help everyone.”
“It’s interesting just to do life with this group of women,” Kerri affirmed. “That’s basically what we’re doing to get to know them and their kids” while also providing “the connection to church and the connection to introducing them to Jesus.”
Creating community connections
In addition to supervising the WorldCrafts artisans, Kerri leads the Adult Learning Center program. Directing the only certified CWJC site in both the city and state of New York, she coordinates efforts related to literacy, English as a Second Language, high school equivalency training and more.
Kerri said Graffiti’s primary ministry philosophy involves “meeting the need first in whatever that need might be; just loving people for who they are, where they are.”
“That could be teaching them job skills or teaching them to read or it could just be sitting down and having a meal with them and making them feel like they’re a person and not judging. That’s not up to us,” she said. “We are to introduce them to Jesus and guide them in that way and follow up with the discipleship.
“The relationships are primary,” she added. “No one’s going to listen to what you have to say about anything eternal if they’re hurting or they’re hungry or they’re lonely.”
Building meaningful relationships
Andrew Mann, executive director of Graffiti 2 Community Ministries and pastor of Graffiti 2 Baptist Church, said many neighborhoods in the South Bronx struggle with such challenges as education, employment, family dynamics and violence.
As Graffiti 2 seeks to help address those issues, “we really believe it’s important to build meaningful relationships and those meaningful relationships provide strength to individuals and families,” he explained. “Of course, those relationships become opportunities to share the gospel with people and that’s our aim in the end – to see people changed not just by our work, but by the work of Christ.
Reflecting on her minisry opportunities in the Bronx through Graffiti 2 Works and WMU, Kerri said, “I feel a lot of times there is no reason that I should be where I’m at right now … but God is blessing the obedience.
Urging fellow believers to actively pursue their own call from God wherever that leads, she concluded, “We aren’t doing anything that anyone else can’t do anywhere else in the world. We are trying to just focus on loving people.” In the South Bronx, that commitment is making a a life-changing difference one person at a time.
Trennis Henderson is a national correspondent for the WMU.