Plating It Forward

When Shaun Christie-David was growing up in Sydney, Australia, his Sri Lankan mother's famous dhal sandwichmade with lentils, tempered mustard seeds, spices, and fried onionswas teased for being "Shit man, your lunch stinks," he tells Australian Story.

"To throw away a piece of my mum's love and to throw away things that my dad worked hard for [because of] being ashamed of my identity," says Christie-David, who was born in Australia but grew up in Sri Lanka, free from war and full of opportunities.

He tried to find his place in the lucrative world of finance, but the money didn't make him happy.

He went to Sri Lanka, free from war and full of opportunities, made him feel guilty, and it got him angry.

"It ate away at me," he says.

"It made me feel uncomfortable all the time.

It hurt."

He escaped to London, where he worked with some Indigenous organizations, and came home and worked alongside some Indigenous organizations, creeping a little closer to the mission he sought.

"I needed to find a purpose," he says, "and I needed to build something that was meaningful.

It turned out, what he was looking for was in Read the Entire Article


Selected Grant News Headlines

A customized collection of grant news from foundations and the federal government from around the Web.

West Hartford Will Use State Grant to Improve Sidewalks Across Town

Pedestrians in West Hartford, Conn., will soon be able to cross more easily thanks to a $697,000 state grant. The Hartford Courant reports that the money from the Department of Transportation's...more

Social Enterprise and Training Center in Albany Celebrates State Grant

"I tried to get half and half the other day. I had to walk four city blocks, just to get a quart of half and half so I could have coffee. So to even get food around here is difficult," David...more

Video Production Company Signal Sing Praises of Aberdeen School Kids

More than 3,000 kids in Aberdeen, Scotland, sang "Northern Lights of Old Aberdeen" in front of thousands of family and friends over the weekend as part of the city's annual "Big Sing" event, the BBC...more

Academic Awards Presented at Cape Hatteras Secondary

North Carolina's Cape Hatteras Secondary School has named its top students for the 2023-24 school term. Here are the top 10, per the Daily News: Zion Aiken: Math Iadette Harris: English IZander...more

Fitchburg State Offering New Creative Degrees

Massachusetts' Fitchburg State University is adding two new majors this fallone in creative arts therapies and one in creative arts enterprisemaking it the first public institution in the state to...more

Nbta Survey to Shed Light on Parties' Stance on Education Ahead of Election

The New Brunswick Teachers Association is asking teachers and voters in the Canadian province to take a survey ahead of the next provincial election in September, the CBC reports. "We've seen a...more

Pratt Institute President Frances Bronet Elected Aicad Board Chair

Frances Bronet, president of New York's Pratt Institute, has been named chair of the Association of Independent Colleges of Art and Design, a group "dedicated to strengthening creative institutions,...more

Press Release: Ok Arts Council Grants and Programs Offered for Fiscal Year 2025

The Oklahoma Arts Council has released its annual list of grant requests, and it's a doozy. This year's list includes a call for artists to "bring the arts to other statewide organizations," as...more

Assistant Coach/Director of Men'S Basketball Operations Creative Content

Northern Illinois University is looking for a full-time assistant coach for its men's basketball team, the Chicago Tribune reports. The ideal candidate will have at least three years' experience...more

Doing the Math: At Cce'S Annual Spring Dinner, 30 Years Equals 1 Million Dollars

When does 30 equal a million? When it's the Spring Dance marking the Center for Creative Education's 30th anniversary, the Palm Beach Post reports. The dinner dance took place March 4 at Club...more





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Wealthy Resource Generation: Tax Us More!


Resource Generation, a group of young people who grew up wealthy, wish to give something back. They published a letter this week that implies advocacy and participation in structural change that will ultimately improve the resourcing of schools in Pennsylvania.