We envision the Grow Together Foundation as a HOME, where everyone can feel welcome, supported, and inspired. It is a place to growin our faith even in a city as vast as New York.
We aim to foster an environment of authentic dialogue and collaboration, grounded in the awareness that our fundamental desires are shared. This common ground becomes the basis for true unity within the educational community, where each person is respected, engaged, and invited into a deeper encounter with truth, beauty, and goodness.
We believe our Foundation rests on FOUR PILLARS.
Our Pillars
EDUCATION
We aim to foster an environment of authentic dialogue and collaboration, grounded in the awareness that our fundamental desires are shared. This common ground becomes the basis for true unity within the educational community, where each person is respected, engaged, and invited into a deeper encounter with truth, beauty, and goodness.
We have launched DAY CAMPS and SUMMER CAMPS on school closure days throughout the academic year, creating spaces where children are welcomed into an environment of friendship, creativity, and meaningful discovery.
CULTURE
Understanding and recognizing the reality in front of us is an adventure and the desire to explore it is part of human nature no matter the age.
Culture is for everybody and we want to help the community to grow and enjoy their life and understand better what we are called for in our daily life.
We want to introduce to sponsor pubblic conversations, exhibits, concerts and music lessons.
SPORT
At the Grow together foundation we believe that sport should have a central role in our community and in everyone’s life. Engaging in physical activities is the best way to discover what motivates us. In accepting a challenge and committing until the end, we recognize how, through hard work, we can improve and achieve goals that may have seemed out of reach.
CHARITABLE WORK
“All human life is sacred, because human life is created in the image and likeness of God. Nothing surpasses the greatness or dignity of a human person.”
St. John Paul II