There's a moment most of us try to avoid.
The moment you lock eyes with someone living on the street.
What happens if you choose not to look away?
In this powerful episode of the Crazy Amazing Humans Podcast, we sit down with Luther Keith Jr., founder of Central Urban Mission, a faith-driven outreach serving unhoused communities across Los Angeles since 1998, and a trained gang intervention specialist who has worked in gang-impacted neighborhoods since the late 1980s.
For more than two decades, Luther has shown up on Skid Row and South Los Angeles morning and night feeding hundreds of people a day, distributing clothing and hygiene supplies, mentoring gang-impacted youth, helping parolees transition, and connecting unhoused individuals to housing and employment opportunities.
But this conversation goes deeper than food distribution. This is not charity as an event. This is compassion as a practice.
We do not shy away from the complicated issues surrounding the homelessness crisis in Los Angeles and nearly all cities. Instead, we lean into them:
• Compassion versus enabling and why showing up still matters
• Boundaries, discipline, and dignity in street outreach
• Gang intervention, mentorship, and earned trust
• Protecting vulnerable youth from human trafficking
• Connecting people to housing, jobs, and second chances
• Why homelessness triggers fear and anger in otherwise compassionate people.
Behind the scenes of this work is decades of experience most people never see. Luther completed formal gang intervention training at Cal State LA and has worked in gang-impacted communities since the late 1980s. Teachers, students, and community leaders speak of the respect he has earned across rival groups, mentoring youth, counseling athletes toward scholarships instead of the streets, and helping create safer environments in South Los Angeles schools.
He also addresses another often overlooked reality of street life: the risk of human trafficking among vulnerable youth. With hard-earned insight, he speaks about awareness, prevention, and the importance of families staying vigilant.
He helps individuals move from the street toward stability by guiding them into housing programs with clear expectations and accountability. He connects people to employment opportunities, including security and event positions tied to major hiring waves around the World Cup and Olympics. He prepares them not only with referrals, but with clothing, direction, and hope.
His model is simple, but not easy: compassion with boundaries. Kindness with backbone. Help that points towards the next step forward.
If you want to support Central Urban Mission, Luther cites the need for practical items such as blankets, hoodies, shoes, hygiene kits, towels, adult diapers, baby diapers, and baby clothes. Luther accepts all forms of help, used clothing, blankets, towels and other useful items you may no longer need. Instead of throwing them away, he makes sure they reach someone who needs them right now, reminding us that each of us can make a difference in someone's life, no matter how big or small.
The donation drop-off location mentioned in the episode:
Central Baptist Church
3120 W. 108th Street
Inglewood, CA 90303
And here is our challenge to you:
Be a Crazy Amazing Human and choose one thing that you can do in the next 48 hours that turns kindness from an idea into an action.
Tell us in the comments the thing you will do or have done!
If you would like to invite others into this important conversation, please like, subscribe, and share it. Don't forget to make sure you're following us at Instagram and also subscribe to our newsletter so that you'll know about this episode as well as the many crazy amazing humans featured in all of our episodes.
iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/artist/katrina-carlson/3563718
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