A person stands in front of a door and a banner reading "Donovan Hines Foundation of Exuberance," wearing a shirt that says "GOD DON'T PLAY ABOUT ME"
Brenda Hines, president and CEO of The Donovan Hines Foundation of Exuberance Co., poses for a portrait outside her office on March 18, 2026, in Milwaukee. (Photos by Jonathan Aguilar / Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service / CatchLight Local)
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Brenda Hines still likes to refer to her son, Donovan Hines, as her “favorite son,” the same way he liked to refer to himself before he was killed on Nov. 13, 2017. 

Donovan was driving near North 29th Street and West Hampton Avenue in Milwaukee when he was struck by a stray bullet and crashed through a fence and into a home in the 4700 block of North 29th Street.

In the months that followed, Brenda Hines said she sank into such a deep, dark grief that she cried daily, unable to eat or work. She even contemplated taking her own life. 

“It took me a while to get out of the state of shock,” Hines said. “It was very difficult, spiritually, for me to come back.”

Now, almost a decade later, she has turned that pain into hope by building The Donovan Hines Foundation of Exuberance Co., a Milwaukee nonprofit that offers consistent, community-based support for families grieving violent loss.

A person wearing glasses and a shirt reading "GOD DON'T PLAY ABOUT ME" sits at a desk with hands clasped, with a cup and office items in the foreground.
Brenda Hines, president and CEO of The Donovan Hines Foundation of Exuberance Co., sits at a desk in her office.

“Exuberance means vibrant. And that’s what Donovan was. He always came out with a smile on his face,” Hines said.

After the unexpected loss of her son, Hines connected with the Medical College of Wisconsin’s Project UJIMA, a collaborative, multidisciplinary program geared to stop violent behavior patterns and reduce the number of children hurt by violence. Meeting with Project UJIMA once a month was helpful and inspired Hines to begin her own grief group that met more frequently. 

“Being a person of color, we don’t seek therapy, and we have so much trauma, so much violence going on,” Hines said.

Hines hosted her grief group weekly for about a year, with the support of the late Bishop Sedgwick Daniels of Holy Redeemer Institutional Church of God in Christ.

“That was the beginning of my healing process,” Hines said. “Not only listening to someone else, but being there for myself.”

A whiteboard displays handwritten messages including "Your talent determines what you can do" and "Your attitude determines how well you do it."
A whiteboard full of encouraging words and prayer hangs on a wall in Brenda Hines’ office.

Seven months after her loss, Hines was asked to continue her work with The Salvation Army Chaplaincy Program, in partnership with the Milwaukee Police Department. She was asked to serve as a chaplain on a case that hit close to home, helping a family who had just lost their son, who was the same age as Donovan, to suicide. 

“It gave me something to hope for,” Hines said. “That’s when I started coming back out and decided to start having empowerment groups and transformation stuff for grief.”

Ever since then, she’s kept going, growing her nonprofit in any way she can, whether it be through the Summer Meal Program for children, the emergency food pantry or stockboxes for older adults.

Two people stand behind stacked boxes labeled "FOODSHARE MAKES HEALTHY EATING SIMPLER FOR SENIORS" and "STOCKBOX," in a room with plants, chairs and a screen on the wall.
Brenda Hines, president and CEO of The Donovan Hines Foundation of Exuberance Co., and James Ferguson, senior partner and chief operating officer at Kingdom Partner Alliance, pose for a photograph with a pallet of stockboxes.
A person wearing gloves holds a box labeled "STOCKBOX" on the open bed of a truck, with other boxes inside and an American flag and building in the background.
Henry Cox loads his truck with stockboxes. A stockbox contains healthy food provided by the Hunger Task Force.

“I just kept going and going. I was like, ‘OK, I’m still not doing enough,” Hines said. “The more I help others, it seems like, the more it helps me.”

Hines, along with several other Milwaukee nonprofits, hosted a survivor-led candlelight vigil to join a National Moment of Remembrance in December. The vigil centered on healing and the belief that everyone deserves the freedom to live.

A person wearing glasses and a striped sweater stands with hands clasped, with rows of lit candles and blurred figures in the background.
Brenda Hines, founder of The Donovan Hines Foundation of Exuberance Co., leads a conversation during a candlelight vigil for those who have been victims of violence in Milwaukee.
Lit candles in glass holders display small portrait photos and names, arranged across a table in a dimly lit room.
Candles with photographs of those who were killed by violence in Milwaukee sit on a table during a candlelight vigil for the National Moment of Remembrance hosted by The Donovan Hines Foundation of Exuberance Co., and several other nonprofits, on Dec. 10, 2025.

On the hardest days, what keeps Hines going is “God first, my family and the foundation.”

A person stands against a red wall with large yellow text reading "But seek first the Kingdom of God … Matthew 6:33," wearing a shirt that says "GOD DON'T PLAY ABOUT ME"
Brenda Hines, president and CEO of The Donovan Hines Foundation of Exuberance Co., poses for a portrait in front of a Bible verse at Kingdom Partner Alliance.

Jonathan Aguilar is a visual journalist at Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service who is supported through a partnership between CatchLight Local and Report for America.

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Jonathan Aguilar is a photojournalist as well as a Report for America corps member and Catchlight Local fellow. Before coming to Milwaukee, he spent two years as a photographer at one of America’s oldest daily newspapers, The Blade, in Toledo, Ohio. Aguilar grew up in the Chicago suburbs. He earned his bachelor’s degree in journalism from DePaul University and his master’s degree from the Medill School of Journalism.