Enquirer News Update - Updated
Mission Moments
Balloons, animals, songs highlight kids' event
Tempo columnist Jim Knippenberg will spend the weekend wandering Paul Brown Stadium, talking to visitors and workers, looking for the lighter side of the
Well, really, what's a kids' event without street entertainers?
Like clowns, jugglers, mimes, storytellers and, of course, a
balloon-ologist.
That's why Matt Praechter, a 17-year-old senior from Northwest
High School, showed up with a team from First Baptist Church of Mount
Healthy at Kidz Gig, Saturday morning's centerpiece of the Greater
Cincinnati-Northern Kentucky Billy Graham Mission.
Armed with 2,000 balloons, a tank of compressed air and big floppy
hats to ward off the sun, they started working the Plaza long before
the 10:30 a.m. event began. When it got too hot there, they moved
into the concourse and stationed themselves above section 126.
The kids followed, lining up two and three deep for the red,
purple, yellow and white balloons Mr. Praechter and co-workers were
twisting into oddly shaped hats.
"These are just gifts to make the kids smile," Mr. Praechter
said. "We can make lots of other things, but today we're only doing
hats."
They must have produced a lot of smiles. The balloons were all
gone by a little after 10 a.m. and the bottom tier of the stadium was
a sea of balloon hats.
Likewise, you can't have a kids' event without animals. Enter
Cincinnati Zoo and Botanical Garden Cat Ambassador program director
Elissa Knights and program founder Cathryn Hilker. They gave up their
Saturday morning to be there.
Both equipped with fanny packs full of treats - raw meat cubes -
they brought Sahara the cheetah and Alexa the Anatolian Shepherd dog.
Raised together as an experiment to prove that dogs can
effectively guard sheep and goat herds, thereby eliminating the need
to trap and kill cheetahs, the odd couple have become best friends.
And the kids? Dead silence, maybe out of awe, maybe because Sahara
was nervous and Ms. Hilker requested silence as the animals went
through their paces on field.
"Are we crazy, out like this on a Saturday morning?" Ms. Hilker
asked. "No, this is the place to be in Cincinnati."
While everyone else in Paul Brown Stadium was there to raise
voices in glory and praise, the Soldiers For Christ were there to
maintain total silence.
They're mimes, all from Avondale's New Friendship Baptist Church,
where they practice twice a week, says coordinator Angela Wooley, and
perform every chance they get.
The seven-member all-male troupe, done up in black T-shirts,
camouflage pants, white gloves and white-face mime paint, run from 7-
to 19-years-old and tell the story of the Gospel without words.
Their first routine re-created Christ's journey with the cross to
Calvary, trudging forward, faltering, trudging more.
"You know, you really can see it and feel it when they do it like
that," said Rita Salter, one of the large crowd watching the group.
"They'll do five more routines, four or five minutes each, before
they go inside the stadium," said Brenda Dubose, the group's other
coordinator. "I'm so proud of them, the way they work so hard. It
really shows."
For the 45 member-delegation - 12 adults, 33 kids - from Dayton's
Tabernacle Baptist Church, Saturday was the day for the kids choir to
shine. Next month, it's the adult choir's turn.
The kids, wearing yellow Kidz Gig T-shirts, were there to join the
3,000-voice children's choir. Rehearsed to the hilt and eager to
sing, none were showing any signs of stage fright milling about the
plaza before entering the stadium.
It might be different for the adults. Their group - the Tabernacle
Mass Choir - is off to New York next month to sing at the 55th
anniversary concert of the Bethel AME Baptist Church on Long Island.
"The trip is July 18 to the 23rd," said member Gail Turner,
"and the concert's only one day. So we're going to be doing a lot of
sight seeing. But first, we just want to enjoy the mission today."