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Aurora Torres-Hansen recognized as
2006 Dream Award Recipient
On
behalf of VolunteerLEON Youth Corps, Commissioner Bill Proctor presented
to the 3rd Annual Leon County DREAM Award to Mrs. Aurora Hansen. DREAM
is an acronym, standing for Diversity, Reflection, Education, Arts and
Multi-generational. The DREAM award is presented to an individual who
best represents the principles of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. including
but not limited to diversity, non-violence, civil rights, leadership,
and/or goodwill towards people. Mrs. Hansen’s daily life greatly
reflects the values and ethics of Dr. King. Mrs.
Aurora Hansen is a native of the Philippines, where she began her work
to become an accomplished dancer. Her training led her to live in
various places across the United States and in London; included in her
long list of accomplishments, is dancing for Presidents Kennedy and
Nixon. She also used her expertise to teach twenty inner-city eight year
olds at the Harlem Dance Theatre in New York for six weeks over one
summer.
She moved to Tallahassee in 1990, where she quickly became involved with
the Filipino community, and the Big Bend community at large. She has
worked with Indak Pilipino, a folkloric dance troupe of the Filipino
Student Association at FSU, and with the Women’s Dance Project. She sits
on the board of the Sickle Cell Foundation, and of the Cultural Resource
Center. Mrs. Hansen has also assisted with the Pangaea celebration at
Rickards High School, and has worked at the Palmer Munroe Community
Center. Currently, she works at the Lawrence Gregory Community Center.
Mrs.
Hansen was nominated for the DREAM Award by Patrice Lyons, a senior at
Rickards High School and Youth Corps Leadership Council Representative.
Patrice said that she wanted to honor Mrs. Hansen because she: “is
really a wonderful person, I first met her when I was 11 taking my first
dance lessons from her. She's always full of energy and is fully
dedicated to whatever she happens to be doing at the moment. She is very
active in the Filipino community, valuing and not forgetting her own
culture, while at the same time working with Unity in the Community
every year and showing an appreciation for the many other cultures
represented in our country." Dr. King once reminded
his audience that, “Life’s most urgent question is: What are you doing
for others?” It is clear that in the case of Aurora Hansen, the answer
is that she daily goes above and beyond to help make our community a
better place. It is because of this hard work, dedication, and love that
she has been awarded the 2006 DREAM Award.
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