MAWN: Can you tell us more of what went into that and how it plays out in the community? WJ: First, in the prison, there was a remarkable man named Brother D, who still remains the greatest person I’ve ever met. He told me that I had one responsibility which was to go home, get my son, stand up, and be a man. He told me that I needed to take the martial arts and use it to empower other children who went through things like I did. It was my duty to give away what God had blessed me with inside that jail cell in order to keep it.
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