Not many people choose to spend their lives working with convicted felons and drug addicts. But Mimi Silbert, founder of San Franciscos Delancey Street rehabilitation project, has committed her every waking hour to helping ex-cons become productive, welcome members of society.
Silbert knows what gets results: in the first 26 years of the program, Delancey Street rescued over 11,000 former convicts, addicts, prostitutes, and alcoholics, without government funding and without a single act of violence. The foundation has grown to include 25 commercial enterprises run by 500 recovering addicts and convicts working out of a $30 million residential/ business complex on San Franciscos waterfront. Taken together, Delancey Streets enterprises generate enough revenue to keep the foundation fully self-sufficient.
Silbert could have taken her formidable skills anywhere. But she cites her solid family upbringing as the reason she chooses to stick her neck out for the common good: Delancey Street functions the way my own family dideverybody looked out for everybody else as we struggled upward. Thats what happens here every day. Together we rise or fall.
Silberts approach is simple. Incoming Delancey Street residents must learn three different trades and take part in weekly group sessions that promote self-understanding, interpersonal communication, and basic life skills. And no one leaves without the equivalent of a high school diploma.
Despite daunting national statistics on recividism among ex-convicts, Silbert starts with the assumption that people can change, and from there, creates that change. |