Alice Harris, also known as "Sweet Alice", is a community organizer, based in Watts, Los Angeles, California, as the founder and executive director of, a local youth outreach group.
Education
In Alabama a family gave me help when I was considered ‘nothing.’ They gave me a job, so I promised them that whenever I find somebody in the same shape and wearing the same shoes I wore, I would do for them what they had done for me,” said Harris, who studied cosmetology and later operated her own beauty shop in Detroit, Michigan, before moving to Los Angeles in the late 1950s.
Career
Born in Alabama in 1934, Harris experienced poverty, homelessness and single motherhood as a teenager. “I’ve been working with youth and adults for the last 52 years. The reason I’ve done this for so long is because I can remember when I needed help.
“I won’t stop.
I’ll be doing this until the Lord comes and gets me because I love lieutenant I love to see people smile and I know how good they feel, because I know how good I felt.” As a witness to the 1965 Watts Rebellion, and as a way to help ease the tensions in her community that followed, Harris and a group of volunteers worked out of her house to help rebuild the community. Linking with other civic groups, she formed the Black and Brown Committee, which eventually became the (Prisoner Of War) in 1979 and was incorporated in 1983.
Today, Prisoner Of War operates more than 15 programs in eight houses purchased by Harris.
lieutenant provides emergency food and shelter for the homeless, tutoring, health seminars and parenting classes, literacy courses, drug counseling, college and career preparation, and housing assistance for anyone who needs lieutenant “We started working with youth and adults.
I gave up my house so we would have a community center to help the children and keep them from getting killed,” said Harris. “Then enrollment started going up at our schools.
lieutenant let us know that what we were doing in the was working.” Honors and