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Active Military Life and Resiliency Skills

The Active Military Life and Resiliency Skills program can be used with personnel at any time during their careers of service, with or without partners!

This program has been developed in collaboration with troops and the agencies that support them and their families. The challenges and opportunities in military life are unique. There are few communities in our world that require such devotion, service and loyalty, as does the military. Service to our nation requires much effort from the families who are part.

It is therefore our duty to provide military families, who do so much for our country, the tools for strong, lasting bonds. And to provide those tools in the context of the actual challenges and adventures our military families realistically face.

                                                                         - Kelly Simpson Crawford
                                                                           HARP Executive Director

Photos from the Military Community Covenant Signing

 

Military Community Covenant Photo


Download a PDF file of the signed Covenant

Inspirational Quote of the Week:

“You are a patriot — the sort of citizen that all of us should be, but so few of us are. You live with sacrifice, because you believe in the rights and ideals that your husband defends. Although you wear no uniform, you are a part of that defense — a vital link in the chain of freedom. Although you wear no medals and will reap no glory on the field of battle, you are hero in the truest sense of the word. You are a military spouse.” (Gene Thomas, from the article “The Hardest Job in the Military”)

Military Community Covenant Partner List

Download the list of the MCC Partners



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Funding for this project was provided by the United Sates Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for Children and Families,
Grant: 90-FE-0037. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this material are those of the author(s) and do
not necessarily reflect the views of the United States Department of Health and Human Services, Administration for Children and Families.