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Leave an Amazon Rating or Review for my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy!
Check out the full episode: https://greatness.lnk.to/1866
Shaka Senghor spent 19 years in prison, seven of them in solitary confinement. Christian Howes, Lewis's older brother, is a world-renowned Jazz violinist who also experienced incarceration. Christian and fellow former inmate turned poet Jimmy Santiago Baca worked with director David Gonzalez to create "Redemption Time," a 70-minute film exploring manhood, trauma, and the possibility of transformation in the most unlikely place. What you're hearing here is the redemptive moment from that film, where Christian's violin breathes life into Jimmy's poetry while Shaka reads words that capture what happens when you walk out of prison with a gift instead of a plan to return to crime. The brotherhood between these two men is palpable. You can hear it in the "Yeah, my brother" at the end, in the way they create beauty together after surviving places designed to break people.
This isn't a story about avoiding mistakes or staying out of trouble. It's about two men who found something in the worst possible circumstances and turned it into art that helps others believe transformation is possible. Shaka is now an author, speaker, and coach. Christian composes music that tells stories most people turn away from. Both men understand that redemption isn't about forgetting where you've been but about offering what you found there to others still searching for a way out. Their collaboration shows that the gifts we discover in our darkest moments, when shared honestly, become the light someone else needs to find their own path forward.
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By Lewis Howes4.8
885885 ratings
Leave an Amazon Rating or Review for my New York Times Bestselling book, Make Money Easy!
Check out the full episode: https://greatness.lnk.to/1866
Shaka Senghor spent 19 years in prison, seven of them in solitary confinement. Christian Howes, Lewis's older brother, is a world-renowned Jazz violinist who also experienced incarceration. Christian and fellow former inmate turned poet Jimmy Santiago Baca worked with director David Gonzalez to create "Redemption Time," a 70-minute film exploring manhood, trauma, and the possibility of transformation in the most unlikely place. What you're hearing here is the redemptive moment from that film, where Christian's violin breathes life into Jimmy's poetry while Shaka reads words that capture what happens when you walk out of prison with a gift instead of a plan to return to crime. The brotherhood between these two men is palpable. You can hear it in the "Yeah, my brother" at the end, in the way they create beauty together after surviving places designed to break people.
This isn't a story about avoiding mistakes or staying out of trouble. It's about two men who found something in the worst possible circumstances and turned it into art that helps others believe transformation is possible. Shaka is now an author, speaker, and coach. Christian composes music that tells stories most people turn away from. Both men understand that redemption isn't about forgetting where you've been but about offering what you found there to others still searching for a way out. Their collaboration shows that the gifts we discover in our darkest moments, when shared honestly, become the light someone else needs to find their own path forward.
Sign up for the Greatness newsletter: http://www.greatness.com/newsletter
Hosted by Simplecast, an AdsWizz company. See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for advertising.

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