Blue Star Mom’s Support Hometown Hero II

FOX17 interview for Hometown Hero II

MI Toy and Trinket CompanyDon’t miss Hometown Hero II: Guardian of Freedom artwork unveiling and fundraiser for Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) and Suicide Awareness. A special thanks to the Ottawa-North Kent Blue Star Mothers for their generous support.

Event Info:

Marne American Legion
1469 Arthur Street, Marne, Michigan
Friday, August 19, 2016
5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m.

Hometown Hero II custom frame/easel designed and manufactured by metal artisan, Steve Umstead, of MI Toy and Trinket Company.

See FOX17 coverage of the Hometown Hero II event…

Hometown Hero II Travels to the Pentagon

Hometown Hero II: Guardian of Freedom

Hometown Hero II
The Pentagon, Washington, DC
September 5-17, 2016

Sergeant Ron Kelsey, founder of Reflections of Generosity, a traveling art exhibition which helps provide soul healing for our military community, invited me to give a presentation, lead a workshop, and exhibit my artwork at the Pentagon in Washington, D.C. in September. I answered, “Yes!”

My talk will raise awareness of post traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and soldier suicide through my new art series called Hometown Hero II that focuses on hope and inner healing for our military community. Some of our soldiers are struggling with a cascade of emotions after returning from war. While in Iraq on an American base, Sergeant Ron Kelsey heard police sirens whiz by. Suicide had claimed another young soldier’s life. Ron writes, “Fellow soldiers walked around like lifeless zombies.”

According to the VA, approximately 11-20% of our current veterans are experiencing PTSD. And 18 to 22 veterans commit suicide daily. This means that approximately 8,000 veterans a year take their own lives. According to NBC News in 2012, more soldiers took their own lives than died in combat.

Healing in Arts

Hometown Hero II paintings are being created for soldiers like Sergeant Ron Kelsey and their families to sign the names of their heroes on the artwork. These paintings will be unveiled at the Pentagon and then will travel to military bases with the Reflections of Generosity Collection. Sergeant Ron Kelsey says, “Art can help heal the battlefield trauma entrenched in the soldier’s heart. Thankfully, in the art world, their feelings and voices can be freely expressed.”

Healing Wings (detail)

Hometown Hero II Art Unveiling and Fundraiser

Hometown Hero II fundraiserJoin us for a pig roast on Friday, August 19, 2016 from 5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. at the Marne American Legion on 1469 Arthur Street, Marne, Michigan. The Hometown Hero II painting will be available for viewers to sign. This event is sponsored by Ottawa-North Kent Blue Star Mothers MI #194.

Become an Art Patron!
Help Fund Hometown Hero II

Many of you will want to help raise the funds needed for the artwork and travel expenses. The paintings will be donated to Reflections of Generosity. Tax deductible funds can be donated through New Horizons Foundation.

Painting with My Hands

Seascape - Pamela Alderman, 2016

My newest series of waterscapes are done by painting with my hands. A tactile experience. Wearing surgical gloves, I apply the oil paint very quickly and create a spontaneous work by following the emerging forms. Viewers say they can hear the water.

Except for the tiny stones in the foreground, which I used a small brush to form, this work was “mostly” painted with my hands.

The Scarlet Cord and The Super Bowl

Targeted - mixed media by Pamela AldermanA year ago when Jim Waring, the vice mayor of Phoenix, spoke at The Scarlet Cord Exhibit opening during the 2015 Super Bowl, he had a message for the buyers of sex: “We are coming after you.” Listening to the vice mayor, I felt like I was on the set of a Batman movie.

According to the U.S. Department of Justice, an estimated 100,000 children are sold within the commercial sex trade in America each year. Wherever thousands of people pour into athletic or other large events—like the Super Bowl—the risk of trafficking increases.

Last year The Scarlet Cord exhibit was located on a vacant lot in downtown Phoenix during the Pro Bowl and the Super Bowl, offering hope and healing to the sexually wounded and curious. During the two-week exhibit, we spoke to students, professionals, vagrants, tourists, and trafficked women.

Here are some of the Phoenix visitors’ responses to The Scarlet Cord:

  • One woman said she was trafficked while her father was wearing the coveted Super Bowl ring.
  • A young girl sat on the curb—holding her head in her hands—crying out, “I know what it is. I know what it is.”
  • A seasoned Phoenix news anchor said, “I did not realize the extent of the problem when I went out there; you can’t walk away without having an impact.”

Shared Hope International reports that “underage sex workers average 6,000 clients over the course of five years, and are typically instructed to serve between 10 and 15 clients per night. However, reports confirm that girls have served as many as 45 clients in a day during peak demand times, which includes major sports events.”

The 2016 Super Bowl is only days away. Will San Francisco, like Gotham, rig up the search lights in the sky—an “SOS”—calling for justice in the war against commercial sex trafficking? We need national leaders and concerned citizens who will stand for the protection of our nation’s most vulnerable—our children.

Visit the Do 1 Thing Challenge page to learn about seven red flags that may indicate a young person is being groom or targeted for trafficking. Find out more about The Scarlet Cord Exhibit and Film to schedule an event or to better understand the issue of sex trafficking—the dark world of Gotham—that exists in our communities. We may not be able to save the thousands of children that will be trafficked this year at the Super Bowl, but we can offer love and hope to one at-risk child within our circle of influence.

StreetLightUSA sponsored The Scarlet Cord in Phoenix, AZ

IMAGE: Targeted, Pamela Alderman, 21 x 62 inches, Mixed media, 2016

The work called Targeted—portraying a child, a bull’s eye, and a roll of film—pictures how children are the ones left harmed by pornography. Not only does the industry deliberately prey on children to ensnare younger and younger viewers, but according to Shared Hope International, one out of every five pornographic images is of a child.