Now, the artwork of each group is part of a mural that hangs outside the other’s school, a daily reminder of the struggles for justice and peace that unites them across continents.
At Francisco I. Madero Middle School, 3202 W. 28th St, a mural on the east side of the school building depicts dozens of colorful butterflies flying from a barren tree with thick roots.
A blue ribbon stretches around the school, bearing the words “Building Hope” in English and also in Spanish and Kinyarwanda, one of Rwanda’s four official languages.
Some of the butterflies were painted by students at the Golden Drop School in Rwesero, a small town an hour outside Kigali, the central African nation’s capital city.
Essentially, the students paint on the fabric, which is highly durable, able to be affixed to an outdoor wall and to survive winters and wall washes with occasional touch-ups.
Golden Drop serves 60 students from 3 to 7 years old. Their parents are survivors of the 1994 genocide that saw ethnic Hutu extremists slaughter more than 800,000 members of the minority Tutsi community and moderate Hutus — about 12% of the country’s population — in less than four months.
“Learning about Rwanda and what those students have gone through was important,” says Sever Menez, an eighth-grader at Madero. “We wanted to show them we cared, too.”
Madero and Golden Drop students were brought together through The Simple Good, a Chicago not-for-profit organization founded by Oak Park native Priya Shah whose aim is to empower marginalized kids across the globe through public art projects.
“When students learn about the struggles in a different part of the world, it puts their own obstacles into perspective and makes them want to do something about it,” Shah says. “Engaging through the arts fosters a sense of empathy and understanding that they can carry with them for the rest of their lives.”
In the 1970s, Shah’s family and more than 70,000 fellow South Asians were expelled from Rwanda’s neighbor Uganda, where many of their families had lived for decades. Shah’s family fled to India and moved to the United States a few years later.
“My mother was born in Uganda and lived there up until her 20s,” she says. “The reason why I started The Simple Good was because I saw the different forms of resilience in my family and around the world.”
Rita Márquez, who has been an art teacher at Madero for more than a decade, had heard about The Simple Good and contacted Shah.
“I wanted my students to have something to focus on, instead of all the negative news you sometimes get out of Little Village,” Márquez says.
She got Héctor Duarte, the well-known Pilsen artist whose works have included turning his own home into a giant mural, to give her students a master class on muralism and help them mold the project from start to finish.
“I started with them from scratch,” Duarte says. “We came together to really understand what this project really means to them and the community. The students were the ones that chose the symbols. It was all very democratic.”
When’s Shah’s organization first got Golden Drop involved, she didn’t know that the school in Rwanda didn’t have a proper classroom in which its students could work on the mural. So The Simple Good built two classrooms for them.
The project involving the two schools has been in the works since 2016.
Márquez hopes to keep adding to the mural over the years, so that ultimately it will wrap around the rest of Madero.
“This was such a big step for all of us to work on something this big at a young age,” says Cristal Palmeros, a Madero eighth-grader. “I’m happy more students will get to share that opportunity.”
Click on the map below for a selection of Chicago-area murals
Carlos Ballesteros is a corps members of Report for America, a not-for-profit journalism program that aims to bolster Sun-Times coverage of Chicago’s South Side and West Side.