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| For the Enterprise/Daniel Berman
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| Left: Visitors to Family Fest relax with warm drinks and blankets as they listen to a performance by Egyptian cellist Ashraf Hakim. |
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| Above: Egyptian cellist Ashraf Hakim performs during Family Fest at Terrace Creek Park Saturday Oct. 4 in Mountlake Terrace. A former virtuoso of the Cairo Opera House, Hakim has performed in 49 countries. |
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Published: Wednesday, October 8, 2008
Family Fest at Terrace Park
By Oscar Halpert Enterprise editor
In the place longtime Mountlake Terrace residents refer to as Candy Cane Park, about 60 people came together on a blustery, cold Saturday, Oct. 4 for Family Fest, resident and community organizer Sharon Riegie Maynard's kickoff event for her latest project, The Children of Our Village.
Maynard, organizer of Bears in Terrace and founder of the neighborhood newsletter The Broadcast, started the new group this year as part of a continuing education program she's involved in.
The non profit organization's goal, she said, is to enrich the lives of children and "make sure all children have experiences that inspire their life, that spark their future dreams so they live their fullest lives."
She brought together others who share her passion for helping kids and, by extension, families. Pam Graham, program manager for Lynnwood-based Family Support Center of South Snohomish County attended the event at Terrace Creek Park, along with Sammie Hayes, director of the nonprofit group Momentums. Sno-Isle Libraries' Mountlake Terrace children's librarian also attended.
Families were entertained by music and an assortment of speakers made presentations geared toward families.
"What I'm seeing is we have the people nationally and internationally who could make children of our village part of an international movement that helps their community nurture the community in better ways," Maynard said. "I think children are a reflection of what the community's about."
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