One of the things I've learned through publishing SAY Magazine is that the most interesting stories rarely come from the people seeking attention. They come from the people quietly doing the work.
The articles in this issue introduced us to individuals who...
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One of the things I've learned through publishing SAY Magazine is that the most interesting stories rarely come from the people seeking attention. They come from the people quietly doing the work.
The articles in this issue introduced us to individuals who are building communities, preserving culture, mentoring youth, creating art, and finding ways to move forward while staying connected to who they are. Some are well known. Most are not. Yet each of them has something worth teaching the rest of us.
As I read through this issue, I kept returning to a simple question: What does it mean to leave something better than you found it?
For some, that means passing language and traditions on to the next generation. For others, it means creating opportunities that didn't exist when they were young. Sometimes it means challenging assumptions. Sometimes it means simply showing up, day after day, and doing work that may never make headlines but still changes lives.
Those are the stories that i
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