Real Men Charities

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Real Men Charities Real Men Charities, is the art of love, our Real Men Cook® spirit; arts; to heal, enrich and serve. Real Men Charities, Inc.

The Healthy Kids, Healthy Families initiative allows you to invest in and partner with nonprofit organizations that offer sustainable, measurable programs to reach children and their families. Programs focused on reducing childhood obesity, providing Male Mentors, and increase health and nutrition, particularly in South Shore, and throughout the south side of Chicago, the southsuburbs and Gary, IN

. National health promotion is focused on social and business equity and community building on a B2B platform with the MOBE Symposium www.MOBESymposium.com. Nationally, our signature brand and event is the annual Father's Day event, Real Men Cook(R), a brand representing Black men serving , generous and engaged as fathers and father-figures. continued a relaiton with Community Mental Health Council that for 20 years to present Real Men, Building Healthy Kids and Strengthening Families. The expanded 2008 program focused on children in nine schools in Englewood Chicago and engaged all 3rd, 4th and 5th graders in the following areas: Nutrition education, Physical activity, Disease prevention and education and Responsible fatherhood

Real Men and trained professionals provided assistance with trauma due to violence and helped in supporting safe environments for children and your 6-24 years of age from 2020-present. In 3 years our CPS programs we changed attitudes and behavior, thanks to the Real Men Building Curriculum and the men who deliver it in the schools. The Eat to Live Garden in Englewood was the destination of our Walking Field Trip at the end of the 2012 school year where the children were given this mantra: "Everything Good Grows in Englewood!"

2014-2016 the programming expanded into the community and our key role in bringing the Healthy Food Hub Market to South Shore Chicago, which in 2016 gained USDA designation as a local food hub. In 2017 our new Male Mentor program included 9 mentees and 7 mentors, committed to a multi-year commitment to restorative justice, culinary and hospitality focus. Ayinde Cartman became Exeuctive Director in February 2017. Yvette Moyo is Chariman & CEO.

2014 -2020 Real Community Investment Group purchased the Quarry Event Center in 2018 and added African drumming to relieve stress and incorporate the arts, and sponsored Jazz at the Quarry, which pivoted from entertainment center into a food stability center to fight COVID, partnering with the Chicago Food Depository and South Shore Works our volunteers distributed over 1 million pounds of groceries, and provided 87,000 PPE packages, thanks to partners and the Chicago Racial Equity and Rapid Response team, on which our Chairman serves representing the South Shore community.

If there’s any month that’s Men’s Month it’s June. It’s never too late to recreate yourself, and we will not assume you ...
03/06/2026

If there’s any month that’s Men’s Month it’s June. It’s never too late to recreate yourself, and we will not assume you know our own Dr Daniel Hale Willliams. We call it !

You've probably never heard his name. But you've felt what he did.

One hot summer night in 1893, a young man named James Cornish was carried into a small hospital on Chicago's South Side.

He'd been stabbed in the chest in a bar fight.

He was going into shock. The medicine of the day said there was nothing to be done — you did not operate on the heart. You let the patient go.

The doctor on duty refused to let him go.
His name was Daniel Hale Williams. And he didn't start out a doctor at all.

He'd been a shoemaker's apprentice. A barber. A young Black man in the 1870s with no clear road into medicine. But he wanted it badly enough to apprentice himself to a surgeon, and in 1883 he graduated from Chicago Medical College.

Then he hit the wall every Black doctor of his time hit. Chicago's hospitals wouldn't hire him.

Black physicians were refused staff jobs across the city. Black patients were turned away at the door. Black women couldn't train as nurses anywhere.

So he didn't beg for a place inside their system.

He built his own.

"A people who don't make provision for their own sick and suffering," he said, "are not worthy of civilization."

In 1891, on the South Side, he opened Provident Hospital. The first Black-owned hospital in America. In*******al staff. A training school for the Black nurses no one else would teach. Every patient through the same front door.

Two years later, that hospital is where James Cornish landed.

There were no X-rays. No blood transfusions. No antibiotics. Williams called in a few other doctors to watch, opened Cornish's chest, worked in the narrow space between the ribs, and stitched the sac around his beating heart — the pericardium — then closed him back up.

It was one of the first successful heart surgeries ever recorded.

James Cornish walked out of that hospital. He lived for decades afterward.

Williams kept going. When the national medical association wouldn't admit Black doctors, he helped start one that would. He operated. He taught. He died in 1931.

And Provident — the hospital he built because no one would give him a job — is still standing on the South Side. More than 130 years later, it's still caring for the city that once shut its doors on him.

He could have spent his life knocking on doors that never opened.

Instead he built his own door. And saved a life no one else would even try to save.

We wish you could understand.
01/06/2026

We wish you could understand.

When College Graduation is a family affair!!!! Congratulations 🥳 🎊 👏🏽 💐 🥳 🎊 to all 2026 Graduates 🎓 💖 💓 Especially, parents who are graduating from college 💖 💕 ❤️

01/06/2026

Miguel Pilgram won a $52 million lottery jackpot in 2010 and instead of disappearing into luxury, he's pouring his fortune into revitalizing Fort Lauderdale's historic African-American business district on Sistrunk Boulevard. The Florida businessman could have bought yachts and mansions, but he chose to invest in a community that has faced decades of economic decline, focusing on preserving its cultural heritage while fostering future growth. Pilgram's initiative goes far beyond typical charity work — he's purchasing key properties and launching new businesses including restaurants and a performing arts center, all designed to directly benefit local residents and restore the area's vibrant spirit. His mission centers on supporting the next generation of Black entrepreneurs and ensuring the community's legacy is honored and uplifted through economic empowerment and cultural preservation. This is what generational wealth building actually looks like when someone understands the assignment. While most lottery winners blow through their winnings within years, Pilgram is creating lasting change that will impact Fort Lauderdale's Sistrunk Boulevard for decades to come. His story proves that sometimes the biggest jackpot isn't what you win — it's what you choose to give back.

Please join us in expressing condolences to the entire Leak family on this devastating loss.
31/05/2026

Please join us in expressing condolences to the entire Leak family on this devastating loss.

Grab your tickets for Real Men Cook, Father's Day, June 21, 2026
31/05/2026

Grab your tickets for Real Men Cook, Father's Day, June 21, 2026

The 37th Annual Real Men Cook returns on Father’s Day, Sunday, June 21, 2026, from 3–6 PM at The Quarry Event Center (2423 E 75th St, Chicago). Chicago's longest Father's Day tradition brings together home cooks, backyard BBQ, professional chefs and caterers, restaurants, community organizations...

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