American Red Cross to Honor Local Heroes
The 16th Annual Heroes Breakfast is Thursday, May 3 at 7:30 a.m. at the Hilton Chicago, 720 S. Michigan Ave. in Downtown Chicago
CHICAGO, IL (February 26, 2018) —The American Red Cross of Chicago & Northern Illinois is honoring local people who demonstrated acts of heroism in the community at the organization’s 16th Annual Heroes Breakfast, Thursday, May 3 from 7:30-9:30 a.m. at the Hilton Chicago, 720 S. Michigan Ave. To purchase tickets or for more information call 312.729.6178 or go to redcross.org/Chicagoheroes.
“The American Red Cross is proud to honor the heroes among us whose extraordinary actions have impacted our communities and inspired us all,” said Celena Roldán, chief executive officer of the American Red Cross of Chicago & Northern Illinois. “From the nine-year-old girl who rescued her whole family from her burning house, to the police officers who saved an infant in a submerged car, to the young father determined to uplift and encourage other young fathers - this collection of leaders have demonstrated that all have the power to leave an imprint upon the world.”
Bob Chodos, Vice Chairman, Newmark Knight Frank will accept the philanthropic Heritage Award on behalf of the Turning the Tide Committee for Hurricane Relief. This committee is being honored for the fundraising events they held to support those affected by Hurricane Katrina and in 2017 for Hurricanes Harvey and Irma. Both events raised more than $1M for Red Cross disaster relief efforts.
Additional honorees were selected in 11 community service categories. They were chosen by an independent committee of leaders in the business and civic community. The 2018 American Red Cross Heroes Breakfast honorees include the following group of local standouts.
Blood Services Hero: Olivia Shorter
Seven-year-old Olivia Shorter is committed to educating others about the importance of donating blood. Olivia was diagnosed with sickle cell disease when she was just seven days old. Sickle cell disease can be managed, but requires medical care and regular blood transfusions. For her 7th birthday, rather than having a traditional birthday party, Olivia hosted a blood drive in her community to raise awareness of sickle cell disease and to encourage people to donate blood.
Community Impact Hero: Sheldon Smith
Sheldon Smith has made it his life's work to end the cycle of fatherlessness and change the narrative for African-American men in this country. In 2009, he started The Dovetail Project, an organization designed to support young African-American fathers in Chicago through parenting workshops, financial literacy training and a voluntary 12-week training program. In 2017, 92 fathers graduated from his signature program, the most in the organization’s history.
Disaster Services Hero: Claire Liszkay
Nurse Claire Liszkay commits her life to medical disaster relief, despite any personal risk. During the 2015 Ebola crisis, Claire was the first nurse at Northwestern to volunteer to care for symptomatic patients. After that, she also served for six weeks in Sierra Leone to treat those afflicted with the virus. Upon her return to the U.S., she was quarantined for three weeks. Following the 2010 Haitian earthquake, Claire set up a self-sustaining clinic for those impacted. Most recently, she was in Bangladesh providing medical relief to Rohingya refugees.
Emergency Medical Assistance Hero: Leona Di Amore
Leona Di Amore sacrificed her own safety to save the life of another. While visiting her daughter at college, students began screaming as a crisis erupted. Leona ran toward the screams and found a student, who had a 10-inch stab wound. With no way to know if the scene was safe, Leona administered first aid to the student, applied pressure to the wound and kept the student calm and conscious as he started to lose feeling from blood loss. The student was hospitalized and recovered because of her quick thinking and life-saving skills.
Firefighter Hero: Captain Michael Casagrande
Captain Michael Casagrande is committed to home fire prevention and safety. As the leader of the Kankakee Fire Prevention Division, Captain Casagrande and his team canvassed the city of Kankakee to install smoke alarms in every home that needed one. He used his knowledge of the local community, including the migrant community to ensure equal access to this life-saving resource. Through his dedicated leadership, more than 10,000 smoke alarms were installed across the city of Kankakee since 2015. Through his fire prevention work, four documented lives have been saved.
Global Citizenship Hero: Nasir Bin Zakaria
Nasir Bin Zakaria was inspired by his personal experience to help fellow refugees. At 14-years-old, Nasir was forced to leave his family and flee from Myanmar. Twenty-three years later, he was granted refugee status and arrived in Chicago. Nasir started working as a dishwasher and quickly realized how difficult it was for Rohingya refugees to adjust to American life. In 2016, Nasir opened the Rohingya Culture Center to create a community for Rohingya refugees. Chicago is now the home to over 1,500 Rohingya refugees, one of the largest communities in the U.S.
Good Samaritan Hero: Kate Dzierzanowski
Last November, Kate Dzierzanowski heard a car strike something outside her St. Charles office. Concerned, she went outside where she found a man whose vehicle had hit a guardrail. She alerted her co-workers to make the 911 call as she assessed the man in the vehicle. He looked unconscious and the vehicle was smoking. Kate couldn’t find a pulse on the man, and with help she dragged the driver from his car. She then started performing CPR. When the paramedics arrived, the man was taken to the hospital. Kate attributes her ability to respond to this situation to her employer for encouraging all employees to become CPR certified and paying for the training. Her quick thinking and actions saved a man’s life that day.
Law Enforcement Heroes: Officers Ryan Davenport and Joseph McDermott
Each day, Belvidere police officers Ryan Davenport and Joseph McDermott put their own lives at risk to save the lives of others. Last March, without hesitation, the officers swam to a woman and infant in a quickly sinking vehicle in the Kishwaukee River. At serious risk of hypothermia and other dangers, they were able to pull the mother and child out of the vehicle and get them quickly to shore. Within three minutes, the vehicle was completely submerged, with only its tail lights shining through the water.
Military Heroes: Roy Sartin & Eli Williamson
Veterans Eli Williamson and Roy Sartin returned from military service overseas to find themselves facing huge amounts of college debt. In talking to fellow veterans, they found issues like debt and unemployment to be pervasive. So, they created “Leave No Veteran Behind,” a program that leverages veterans’ skills to solve community issues while providing employment and debt alleviation services, in exchange for community service. One program, in collaboration with Chicago Public Schools, has veterans line the most dangerous streets of Chicago to make sure kids get to school safely. “Leave No Veteran Behind” has provided 925 transitional jobs and relieved $150,000 of student debt.
Nurse Hero: Rebecca Christiansen
As a nurse, Rebecca Christiansen saw firsthand how healthcare professionals can at times paint a dire picture for parents of babies born with disabilities. She experienced this directly, when her own son was born with Down syndrome. After his birth, Rebecca created “Celebrate Differences,” an organization that not only provides programming for adults and children with disabilities, but also provides a support network, social activities and many other resources. Rebecca also runs “A Pinch of Happiness,” a spice shop in downtown Oswego that employs young adults with disabilities. Rebecca's work brings acceptance and joy, as well as workforce development, to her community.
Youth Hero: Charmin BoClaire
Having learned about fire safety at school, ten-year-old Charmin BoClaire saved her family in a raging house fire. Charmin was able to get her mother, four-year-old sister and ten-month-old brother safely out of the house. It took two trips, and she had to help her mother extinguish flames on her legs. She kept calm and took swift action during an incredibly frightening moment. Her family is alive and together thanks to Charmin’s heroic efforts that day.
CBS 2 brings its prime-time anchor team to host the Heroes Breakfast: Rob Johnson and Irika Sargent, co-anchors of the 5, 6 and 10 p.m. news. Johnson has emceed the event for over ten years. Sargent joins us for her third year.
The 2018 Heroes Breakfast is made possible thanks to the generosity of our sponsors: ITW, William Blair, Kirkland & Ellis, United Airlines, Aon, CDW, Fresenius Kabi, Grainger, Motorola Solutions Foundation, Nicor Gas, PwC, USG, Walgreens, Anixter and BMO Harris Bank.
About the American Red Cross of Chicago & Northern Illinois:
The American Red Cross of Chicago & Northern Illinois serves 9.5 million people in 21 counties including Boone, Bureau, Carroll, Cook, DeKalb, DuPage, Grundy, Kane, Kankakee, Kendall, Jo Daviess, LaSalle, Lake, Lee, McHenry, Ogle, Putnam, Stephenson, Whiteside, Will and Winnebago. The American Red Cross shelters, feeds and provides emotional support to victims of disasters; supplies about 40 percent of the nation's blood; teaches skills that save lives; provides international humanitarian aid; and supports military members and their families. The Red Cross is a not-for-profit organization that depends on volunteers and the generosity of the American public to perform its mission. For more information, please visit us at redcross.org/il/chicago or visit us on Twitter @ChicagoRedCross.
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