It’s been four years since a white father-and-son duo killed Ahmaud Arbery while he was jogging in Glynn County, Georgia — and his mother continues keeping his memory alive.
In 2021, Wanda Cooper-Jones established the Ahmaud Arbery Foundation in remembrance of her son with the goal of providing secure locations for Black boys and teens, aged 10 to 18, to run freely.
Adidas spotlighted the efforts and impact of Cooper-Jones and eight other revolutionary Black women in its four-part “Create with Purpose” documentary series, the organization shared in a release.
“Ahmaud had some mental challenges that he was facing, and he used running as a sense of therapy,” Cooper-Jones said in the documentary. “My first idea was to be a resource for Black boys in the areas of physical and mental well-being.”
In 2022, the foundation established a scholarship fund and awarded $5,000 to six students who, like Arbery, graduated from Brunswick High School. The foundation handed out three more scholarships in the same amount this year.
The foundation also raises money through the Run with Maud 5K in downtown Atlanta, which usually takes place days before Arbery’s birthday, in collaboration with the Atlanta Track Club.
“I had some very, very dark days,” Cooper-Jones said. “Prayer was all I had. I had come to terms that Ahmaud wasn’t going to come back, which was very, very hard. I knew deep down in my heart that Ahmaud hadn’t did anything wrong, and it was my job as a mom to fight for justice for him. But I had to come up with something that would also make a difference in the community, where people would still call his name.”
Produced under Adidas’ Honoring Black Excellence program — which celebrates Black culture and individuals for their accomplishments — “Create with Purpose” serves as a means for HBE to provide honorees with their “flowers while they are still here.”
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