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How Pittsburgh Steelers' Najee Harris and family are helping out homeless shelter where they once lived

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RICHMOND, Calif. -- Two days before his first free kids' camp, Najee Harris pulls into the parking lot of the Greater Richmond Interfaith Program, a shelter in north Oakland on 22nd Street where he lived with his mom and four of his siblings 12 years ago.

It's June 23, and the Pittsburgh Steelers running back has been back in his home area for about a week. He makes sure to stop by the shelter every time he returns home, and this is his first visit to GRIP on this trip.

On the side of the building stretches a larger-than-life mural promoting housing for all with images of people from all walks of life and messages of equality. On the far right of the mural is a giant rendering of Harris in a red jersey. Initially, Harris didn't want to draw attention to himself by being in the mural, but he eventually acquiesced to the request. Now it serves as a reminder of his journey to the NFL, by way of the Alabama Crimson Tide, from living in shelters and temporary housing.

"I come out here, and I'm driving by, and I see me," Harris says. "Usually people get this type of stuff when they pass away. I'm alive.

"It's dope to see. I'm blessed enough to live and see people making stuff like that about me from when I used to stay here."

During the NFL season, the Steelers' 2021 first-round pick doesn't get back to the Bay Area often. Whenever he gets a chance, he prioritizes giving back to the community that helped shape him with in-person visits.

"When they see me in person, it does something different for the people," he says to ESPN. "Just to see me in the flesh. Talking to them, seeing that I'm down to earth, and I can talk to them about any problems they've got, and I can tell them my stories and what I have to go through. I try to be in person as much as possible, through everything. Through all my events, any time I'm doing something, if I'm in the Bay Area, I try to be by myself, alone. They see me walking around like a regular person."

On this seasonably warm day, Harris is greeted by Jim Rettew, the interim director of GRIP, and a few resident families waiting to catch a glimpse of him in the parking lot. Even more onlookers wave from a second-story window, craning their necks to see the most famous former resident while they quarantine with COVID-19 infections.

He takes pictures with the group out front, including a Tennessee native who tells Harris he's been an Alabama fan his whole life. Harris learns the man has been in Richmond for six months, following his wife, who's from nearby Pittsburg. Then, Harris pivots to a group of Spanish-speaking women, talking with them in the conversational Spanish he's picked up from living in the melting pot of the Bay Area. A toddler named Justin, shy at first, walks over to Harris, who crouches down to greet him. Together, the pair point and wave to the kids in the windows before Justin takes Harris' hand and leads him to the playground behind the building that Harris and his family helped renovate.

Along with new playground equipment and a new grill for hosting community events, there are brightly painted benches and miniature picnic tables. One table is painted black and gold and has tiny footprints of Harris' nephew decorating the top. Harris' siblings and mom painted their initials on the picnic table, leaving their mark on a place that left one in their hearts.

"I had to grow up at a young age," Harris says as he watches Justin run around the playground. "Now that I'm in the position I am, I play around a lot. It's like, I never had that when I was young. I had to be taking care of myself, finding stuff like food, had to find something to drink every now and then. Get into fights every now and then. Had to mature at a young age. The problems now, it's not real problems. It's good problems. There's a difference between real problems and good problems."

The next day, Harris hosts a free kids' camp for hundreds of local kids at his high school, located about an hour from GRIP, making good on one of the promises he told one of his high school coaches, Brett Dudley, when he was a teenager.

"As a 16-year-old in high school, he's telling me his dreams to open up a Boys and Girls Club and to give back to the community," Dudley says. "And he wants to run a camp for kids when he gets older.

"He just sees that other people helped him in his life and that one day he would have a chance to pay all that stuff back."

ESPN spent three days with Harris in the Bay Area in June 2022 and saw his impact on the community firsthand.

(The following story was originally published in November 2021.)

The first thing Najee Harris wanted to replace was the carpet.

It was once blue-green. But the short-looped industrial weave that covered the floors at the Greater Richmond (California) Interfaith Program (GRIP) had faded into a stained amalgamation from shoe prints of more than 20 years, traces of countless families looking for a fresh start.

The shoes of Harris, his mom and his four older siblings walked over that carpet when they arrived at the Richmond shelter more than a decade ago. This was the last of several shelters the Pittsburgh Steelers rookie running back and his family stayed in during his childhood, a time when they faced multiple evictions and a stint living in a van at Golden Gate Park.

When he went back to the shelter for a visit between helping Alabama win the national championship in January and becoming the No. 24 overall pick of the NFL draft in April, Harris noticed the carpet. He made a mental note to change it when he got the chance.

A few months later, thanks to a partnership between his foundation and Lowe's, Harris helped GRIP replace the carpet with a dark hardwood tile throughout the 12,000-square-foot, two-story building.

And he didn't stop there.

While Harris, 23, watched through a video call from the Steelers' facility last month, nearly 100 volunteers, including his family, descended on GRIP to start fulfilling the wish list Harris and his mother, Tianna Hicks, compiled from their experience living in the shelter and through meetings with the organization over the summer.

The additions included new appliances, a computer, a grill, a rock wall, a playground, landscaping, pavers in the parking lot and a fresh coat of light blue-gray paint that looks almost iridescent when the light catches it.

"We have people that donate money, but having Najee is different," said Siu Laulea, who was the case manager for Harris' family during its stay at GRIP. "He wanted to upgrade the place. ... [The residents] feel like it's more like a home. It's not like a facility, because of the color of the floor we have. And with a different-color paint, it's just a warm feeling. The vibe we do get from the residents, it's a different vibe.

"It's more like a happy vibe."

Once uncomfortable sharing his experience growing up homeless, Harris is now using his platform to make an impact in various ways.

"I found out that I could help people, my story could help people -- or it will make them feel like they're not alone in a way," Harris said.

'You've got to look at the bigger picture'

Harris was furious with Marcus Malu.

A trusted friend, Malu was also Harris' trainer, and he ran a gym in the Antioch community where Harris went to high school.

Like Harris, Malu, an Antioch native, knew what it was like growing up in difficult circumstances.

One day around his sophomore year, Harris overheard two classmates talking about him and how he lived in shelters growing up.

He confronted them and asked how they knew. Then, he went to Malu.

Malu told him he shared part of Harris' story at a strength and conditioning banquet the day before. He thought Harris' story could help inspire the students.

​​"'Man, I'm not happy with that,'" Malu remembers Harris telling him. "I said, 'Listen, cut me off if you need to, or be mad if you have to. But sooner or later, you're going to have to tell your story. It's part of who you are.'"

Harris didn't speak to Malu the next two weeks. Then, he walked back into Malu's gym and sat down wordlessly. He didn't have to say anything for Malu to know Harris had forgiven him.

"I was mad as hell at him, but I didn't understand it," Harris said. "I didn't understand my story, I guess, like that. I guess they call it a testimony. I didn't understand how it would help other people. I didn't get the bigger picture at that time. I thank him for that, though. He helped me out with opening up."

Harris is starting to understand how to impact change, naming his newly formed nonprofit organization Da' Bigger Picture Foundation after realizing little things can add up to make a difference.

"If all of us help each other out somehow, then we all can just try to make a change into something," Harris said. "It took me all these years to really figure that out, so I wanted to help somebody else, because people think that success or whatever you want, prosperity, anything, just happens like that.

"It's not really that simple. You've got to look at the bigger picture."

It's a message Hicks started instilling in Harris and his siblings during their formative years spent in temporary housing.

Harris and his family worked at soup kitchens, Christmas toy drives and Special Olympics events.

"I may have been there in line myself, but I might've got on the other side of the table and helped pass out food as well," Hicks said. "I've done a few things throughout their lives, just to show them that giving back is as important as receiving."

'Such a philanthropist'

On one of the biggest days of his life, Harris was worried about dessert.

Not for him, but for the group of kids he was preparing to feed at a pre-draft party at GRIP before the first round began on April 29.

The night before, Harris was restless; he couldn't sleep. He grew concerned there wouldn't be enough food.

The next morning, he realized he might be short on dessert.

"He wanted to make sure that those kids had everything: dessert, food," Hicks said. "He was worried about dessert. He was calling around asking for someone to go find dessert so they can have sweets afterwards."

Harris' story of homelessness has been told at every single stop of his career. And when the local news channels caught wind of the pre-draft party at GRIP, the cycle started over again.

But with every round of renewed interest comes another opportunity to inspire or provide for one more person.

Donations poured into GRIP after Harris highlighted the organization during the draft party, helping it to not only continue providing shelter to families in the area, but also serve hot meals to the community and offer programs that assist with obtaining legal documents or referrals for drug and alcohol treatment.

"Before this all started, we were in the negative as a nonprofit," said Nicole Jones, GRIP's executive assistant. "People saw on the news and started coming in. Here's a check here, here's a check here. ... With those monies, we're able to keep afloat. Keep payroll going with the staff, keep the doors open and keep the programs going."

While Harris helped with a lot of the behind-the-scenes planning for the draft day party, Hicks has been instrumental in continuing the work and mission of the Da' Bigger Picture Foundation.

"It's very rewarding, and it'll make you feel very empowered to know that I can do something to change things," Hicks said. "It makes a big difference now, because you don't speak when you're homeless. You're too focused on trying to make sure you have a place to stay that night for your family. Trying to make sure you can feed them that evening. How am I going to get to school, to work, tomorrow?

"So, being able now to come back and say, 'These are some things that I know these families are going to need,' it changes things. That's why I want to tackle this so much more, because I see differently now."

In the midst of his rookie season, Harris -- whose Steelers host the Chicago Bears on Monday night (8:15 p.m., ESPN) -- hasn't decided what project he wants to tackle next, or when.

"He's such a philanthropist, and you can just see those motors running in his head," Jones said. "He wants to do this, he wants to do that. I'm like, 'Wait, slow down. Anything that you want to do, we're going to let you do. But slow down, we've got to do one at a time.'"

Once, Harris even asked if he could purchase the GRIP building to help out. Jones laughed and told him they already owned the building. So he came back with another idea.

"'Well, what if I wanted to buy a building and open up another shelter?'" Jones remembers Harris asking her. "I said, 'You can do that, too.'"