Picture a spring afternoon in Harlan, Kentucky in 2013. The sun is bright, the air crisp, the mountains surrounding the historic coal town are vibrant green, and eight-year-old Kaleb McLendon is doing what he loves – playing basketball on the blacktop behind the . “Miss Kateena” Haynes walks toward the court with Kendra Calhoun, who is interviewing for a position at the Club, and introduces her to the kids in the after-school program.
As Kaleb and the others shoot hoops with “Miss Kendra,” he asks her where she’s from.
“I’m from right here in Harlan,” she answers, “but I went to Lexington for college.”
Kaleb pauses the game, in disbelief. “I thought people who look like us couldn’t go to college,” he says, pointing to his skin. Kaleb is biracial, and Calhoun is African American.
“Absolutely you can,” she tells him. “You can go to any college you want to.”
[PHOTO: Kaleb, second from left, during a Boys & Girls Club summer camp in 2016]
That was the beginning of a special bond that changed Kaleb’s life. The youngest of his seven siblings, Kaleb became the first in his family to graduate high school and then the first to attend college. Today, he is a sophomore at AVÍ·µÈ²Õ (UCU) in Barbourville, Kentucky. He plays basketball for UCU, serves as a work study at the , and wants to make the kind of difference in other people’s lives that the Club made in his.