
 
        
         
		LOCAL NEWS 
 Making a diff erence 
 How the 2021 David Prize winners are supporting New Yorkers 
 BY HAEVEN GIBBONS 
 The  2021 David Prize  
 awarded  $1  million  dollars  
 to fi ve New York  
 City-based  visionaries  within  
 the child care, education and  
 youth services and immigration  
 sectors to support their creative  
 solutions to some of the city’s  
 most pressing challenges. 
 The David Prize is an  
 initiative to support up-andcoming  
 change-makers  in  
 New York City. The third  
 annual David Prize open call  
 is currently open. New Yorkers  
 can apply or nominate someone  
 through Dec. 21. 
 The 2021 David Prize  
 winners are already making a  
 big difference in the city. 
 On  Oct.  19,  Jaime-Jin  
 Lewis,  Five  Mualimm-ak,  
 Cesar Vargas, Fela Barclift and  
 Felicia  Wilson  each  received  
 $200,000  to  transform  their  
 plans  into  lasting  initiatives  
 that  will  directly  impact  New  
 Yorkers. 
 Jaime-Jin Lewis, founder of  
 Wiggle Room, a tech company  
 that  builds  tools  to  stabilize  
 and  grow  Family  Child  Care  
 businesses, is expanding the  
 organization’s reach to support  
 more childcare providers with  
 the support from the Prize. 
 “This win is for all early  
 childhood  advocates  and  
 activists in NYC who have  
 been working on this issue for  
 decades,” Lewis said. “This  
 prize signals that childcare  
 is a critical issue our city is  
 facing, and it tells New York  
 that  it  is  time  to  invest  in  the  
 creative  solutions  to  build  up  
 this  early  care  industry  and  
 provide overdue support for  
 the educators who are raising  
 our next generation.” 
 Family Child Care businesses  
 often provide childcare to poor  
 and working class communities,  
 communities of color, children  
 ages 0 to 3 and children whose  
 guardians work non-traditional  
 hours. Lewis is fi ghting  for  a  
 more durable childcare system  
 in New York City. 
 “The prize has helped more  
 people realize the critical state  
 of child care in our city,” Lewis  
 said. “This is a huge mission,  
 (Above) Fela Barclift, a recipient of the 2021 David Prize, helps kids at her preschool, Little  
 Sun People.  (Right,  top to bottom)  Jaime-Jin Lewis,  Five Mualimm-ak,  Felicia Wilson and  
 Cesar Vargas also received the prize for their change-making work in New York City. 
 and this is something that is  
 long overdue in our city. This  
 prize has really given us the  
 visibility  to  build  and  grow  
 strategic relationships across  
 the sector.” 
 Five  Mualimm-ak  works  to  
 bridge the gap of services for  
 justice-impacted-young-adults  
 serving multi-year community  
 supervision sentences. Five  
 runs the Youth Anti Prison  
 Project which houses, trains  
 and employs youth throughout  
 their entire community  
 supervision sentence. 
 With the Prize, Five is  
 launching two homes: one  
 for young women and one for  
 young men ages 18-25. The  
 homes will provide a landing  
 pad for young people as well  
 as businesses that provide  
 apprenticeship programs for  
 the youths. 
 Mualimm-ak  said  creating  
 housing for youths creates  
 opportunity. With the support  
 of the Prize, Mualimm-ak will  
 be able to provide safe spaces  
 for young-adults and give  
 kids the start they need to be  
 successful in life. 
 “They’re (the David Prize)  
 empowering New Yorkers,”  
 Mualimm-ak  said.  “Through  
 supporting me, they’re  
 supporting so many people.” 
 Fela Barclift, also known as  
 “Mama Fela,” is the founder of  
 Little Sun People, a preschool  
 in  Bed-Stuy  that  has  been  
 a community pillar for four  
 decades. The school fosters  
 self-esteem and positive  
 identity through an Afrocentric  
 curriculum. 
 With  the Prize, Barclift will  
 expand Little Sun People to  
 support students from Pre-Pre  
 K and beyond, with plans to  
 build an elementary school. She  
 also plans to codify the culture  
 and curriculum of Little Sun  
 People for other schools and  
 educators and write a book  
 of affi rmations  for  African  
 descendant children. 
 Felicia Wilson advocates  
 for youth and young adults  
 transitioning out of the New  
 York City foster care system  
 to receive the resources and  
 support needed to thrive. 
 She plans to build out her  
 new non-profi t  organization,  
 What About Us with the Prize  
 support. 
 DEXTERITY PRODUCTIONS LLC 
 What About Us, a Brooklynbased  
 non-profi t, works to  
 support people ages 13 – 25  
 aging out of the foster care  
 system through helping them  
 navigate housing, fi nancial  
 management, education and  
 employment. The nonprofi t  
 connects youth with alumni of  
 the foster care system who have  
 successfully aged out. 
 Cesar Vargas, who provides  
 competent legal counsel to  
 immigrants serving in the U.S.  
 Armed Forces, is building a  
 city-wide network of agencies,  
 nonprofi ts and legal providers  
 to further support immigrants  
 and their families who face  
 the complexity of navigating  
 immigration and military law. 
 This year, The David Prize  
 team and a diverse, multi sector  
 group of expert advisors chose  
 22 fi nalists  from  thousands  
 of submissions sharing ideas  
 in  areas  including  child  care,  
 education and youth services,  
 human rights and criminal  
 justice, immigration justice,  
 homelessness, economic  
 development and sustainability,  
 healthcare  and  creative  
 expression. 
 PHOTO BY COOTCHILL NELSON 
 PHOTO BY COOTCHILL NELSON 
 PHOTO BY COOTCHILL NELSON 
 DEXTERITY PRODUCTIONS LLC 
 Due to the extraordinary  
 circumstances over the last  
 two years, the other 17 fi nalists  
 also received support from  
 The David Prize in the form of  
 industry connections, fi nancial  
 support, further sources of  
 funding and other assistance. 
 The  2021  fi nalists  include:  
 Yin  Q,  Troy  Walcott,  Sharon  
 Richardson, Shams DaBaron,  
 Ravi  Ragbir,  Michael  Angelo  
 Roberson, Liz Jackson, Kristin  
 Wallace, Ken Lewis, Chris  
 Hackett, Gladys Jones, Gabrielle  
 Prisco, Darnell Benoit, Carmen  
 Mojica, Caridad De La Luz,  
 Alexis Mena, and Ana Maria  
 Martinez de Luco. 
 24     December 16, 2021 Schneps Media