Rites of Passage (educational program)

Rites of Passage is an African American History program sponsored by the Stamford, Connecticut US public schools.

The program consists of an extra day of schooling on Saturday for 12 weeks, service projects,[1] and a culminating educational trip to Gambia and Senegal, the ancestral homes of many African Americans.

The Door of No Return symbolizes the last point of departure of African slaves being shipped to the Western Hemisphere.

As Rodney Bass, the founder and director of the program describes it: By passing through "The Door of No Return" the students invalidate the legacy of slavery and reconnect with the ancestral heritage, linking their past to their present.

He and the other teachers who lead the program: hypothesized that we can help produce healthier young people who now understand slavery was not their beginning, nor the principal means of defining the African-American experience, but instead a real, limited part of a legacy of faith, pride, and endurance that spans millennia.The program is open to students of all races and heritages.

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