By Eleanor Boswell-Raine,
Globe Managing Editor
Urban
America is infected with a voracious social
plague that is claiming the lives of young
people every day, sending crime statistics
soaring. East Bay communities in and around
Oakland and Richmond are in the grip of an
epidemic that respects no map’s boundaries
and boldly spreads its virus across a broad
swath of neighborhoods. Up and down the Interstate
80 corridor, families and communities are losing
their young people.
East Bay
crime statistics contain staggering evidence that the largest number of homicides
involve black males killing black males between the ages of 18 and 25. Identities
of perpetrators are guarded by a “no snitching” culture and families
fearful of retaliation. Neighborhoods feel helpless to put an end to the madness.
Friends and family members have exceeded their threshold for pain and are numbed
by the audacity of living within the circle of violence; too many of their youthful
relatives, friends and church members have been gunned down on sidewalks and
streets.
So what can communities do to
turn the bloody tide of a growing youth sub-culture
that appears to be getting younger, whose answer
to daily disputes is a bullet and whose respect
for human life flies in the face of civility?
Whose
responsibility is it to put a stop to youths engaged
in violence? What’s the magic formula? Three-parts
prevention and one-part enforcement? More government-
and privatefunded programs? More police enforcement?
More parental involvement? Censoring of music that
romanticizes the culture? More intervention volunteers?
More involvement by the faith community — out
of the pulpit and into the streets? All the above?
More?
The Globe’s commitment is to keep the
issue of black on black crime in front of our readers
on a weekly basis; provide a consistent flow of
information to raise awareness of what we can do
as individuals to contribute to solutions; educate
and separate fact from fiction; and outline challenges
and mark progress toward solutions by various community
efforts and organizations, both public and private.
The Globe has engaged a team
of writers and photojournalists led by “Seeking Solutions” Editor
David Muhammad (former executive director of the Oakland-based
organization The Mentoring Center and present director
of community commitment for Washington, D.C.).
Muhammad’s expertise in the field, familiarity
with efforts underway in Alameda and Contra Costa
counties and continuing Bay Area involvement, as
well as his journalism background, make him the
ideal editor for this series. Please see the first
installment of “Seeking
Solutions” (583KB .PDF file).
Or see
the three Crime Series articles:
Blood
in my eyes -
The Story of a Young Oakland Woman >>
What's working:
How to develop an effective program >>
Examing Black on Black
Crime by David Muhammad >>
Or download
the entire Crime
Series .PDF (584 KB) >>