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March
1, 2001
STAFF Q&A/Prison provided a wakeup call for this child of the streets. "I said, I'll show the world. I was not one that you should have counted out." BY SARA MARCUS
Its a straight shot down 34th Street from Robert Alsbrooks childhood home in the Mantua section of West Philadelphia to the office he now occupies at the Medical School. Alsbrooks, however, took the long way around. He took a detour through the underground economy and did seven years in a state penitentiary on assault charges. In the five years since hes been out, hes more than made up for lost time. In January, his contributions earned him Penns Martin Luther King Community Service Employee Award. Heres why. Hes founded organizations including Miracle @ 34th Street, which runs social and educational activities for Mantua youth; Miracle Corners of the World, which does development and service projects in Africa; and Miracle @ Penn, a new group which he hopes will draw Penn students into the first two groups projects. With his colleague Jesse Chittams, he is developing a research internship program for high school students called Diversity initiative in Research for Under-represented Minorities (DRUM). Speaking quietly as his 3-year-old son napped in his arms, Alsbrooks reflected on the journey behind him and the paths yet to come. Q.You were involved in drug dealing when you were young. At what
point did you get out of that culture? [Prison] is the best thing that ever happened to me. Because it woke me up. It made me realize that I was a sleeping giant. It made me realize my full potential. If it would have never happened, guess what? Id be still walking around not knowing what I could do, cause I was never challenged. That was the ultimate challenge: You so smart, and you so brave, survive this! So I took the challenge on. I just keep setting other challenges on myself. I will be a millionaire. Thats my next challenge. Q.How are you going to become a millionaire? If youre not a dreamer, if you dont believe in your power, youll never get what youre supposed to have. I used to work at UPS, okay? And I told people about it, they said, Oh, you were in jail, and you got a UPS job? Thats wonderful! You better never leave that! Youd be crazy to leave that! Right? So I told people I was leaving this job. Why? What are you gonna do? I dont know what Im gonna do yet, but I know I cant be here. Its time to move on. I left. Guess what? If I would still have that job, I wouldnt have this one, you see? And I tell people all the time, if you want any fruit in life, youve got to go out on a limb. Out on a limb is where fruit grows. You go out on a limb, you take a risk. Sure, it might break. But guess what? Ima grab some fruit on the way down. Q.Talk about your mentor, the late anti-drug activist Herman Wrice. Dr. Wrice always told me that Mantua was my testing ground. He always told me that your neighborhood will never truly accept you the way you need them to. Any time you go anywhere else, he said, it will spread like a wildfire. People tend to work better with people that they dont know, and they get more lax with people that they do know. Q.What do you do at Penn? Ive got a new mentor over here at Penn. His name is Harold Haskins.
I was talking to him, he said, Robert, you gotta get your Ph.D. And all
weekend Ive just been thinking about it. Doctor Alsbrooks. Doctor
Robert Alsbrooks. Im trying to get it in my head.
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