Students had raised money for homeless youths, food for the hungry, goats for women in Kenya and countless other causes over the past year. Their payoff came Wednesday, when 18,000 like-minded Minnesota youths packed the Xcel Energy Center in St. Paul for the second annual We Day celebration.
The energetic crowd cheered with approval as more than a dozen speakers and celebrities urged them to continue their work, part of a global movement advocated by We Day organizers.
"We all have personal challenges, those that keep us up at night," said Clemantine Wamariya, a survivor of the genocide in Rwanda in the mid-1990s told them. "But we still show up to serve others."
Since the first We Day Minnesota last fall, students from more than 550 Minnesota schools have participated in one local and one global service project — which in turn gave them a ticket to the We Day celebration.
They volunteered 167,000 hours of community service and raised $378,250 for causes both local and global, said Dean Phillips, state co-chairman of the event.
Gov. Mark Dayton proclaimed Nov. 12 We Day Minnesota, in honor of the volunteer blitz. National Basketball Association legend Earvin "Magic" Johnson offered words of encouragement — and announced a surprise $1 million donation to build schools in Africa.
Kweku Mandela, grandson of former South African President Nelson Mandela, told the packed center that his grandfather paid tribute to the "heroism of youth" the day he was released from prison. He called upon the "young lions" present to set forth and make the world a better place.
In the crowd cheering from the bleachers was Vivianna Russ, an 11-year-old from Minnetonka Middle School West.