Actor Will Smith, a native of Philadelphia, has his Party 4 Peace
celebrity weekend here to raise money and awareness about violent
crime. In Memphis, volunteers from the Temple of Christ Baptist Church
repainted the graffiti-defaced garage of an 86-year-old grandmother.
V.J. Smith has started a Minneapolis chapter of MAD DADS (Men Against
Destruction Defending Against Drugs and Social Disorder), which parades
the streets, urging black males to sign a pledge abjuring violence. Across
the nation, black males are stepping up to address what is loosely
called black-on-black crime. An increasing number of blacks are saying,
in the words of some civil rights activists: No one can save us from
us, but us. "When the Catholics had issues, they started Catholic
Charities," Smith said in an interview with Minnesota Public Radio.
"When the Lutherans had issues they started Lutheran Social Services.
When the blacks had issues, we started riots. So we need to do
something different." Though overly simplistic, the point is
unmistakably clear - blacks must take the lead in curbing homicides in
their communities, most of which involve an African American killer and
an African American victim. Actually, I dislike the term
black-on-black crime for several reasons. First, crime is crime,
regardless of the race of perpetrator or victim. Criminals should be
defined by their acts, not by their race, which has nothing to do with
a propensity to commit crimes. In 2005, the right-wing New
Century Foundation published a report titled "The Color of Crime: Race,
Crime and Justice in America." The report cataloged a collection of
statistics designed to give the impression that blacks are routinely
killing and attacking whites. According to the Justice
Department's Bureau of Justice Statistics, blacks are seven times more
likely to commit homicides than whites. As important, African Americans
are six times more likely to be homicide victims. From 1976 to
2005, according to a report issued last summer by the bureau, 86
percent of all white homicide victims were killed by whites and 94
percent of all black homicide victims were killed by blacks. A
study issued earlier this year by the Washington-based Violence Policy
Center found that black homicides in Pennsylvania ranked No. 1 in the
nation: 398 during 2004. Of the victims, 348 were male. The
figures on black homicides from that study reveal that differences in
age, gender and race are likely to determine whether one becomes a
statistic. The homicide rate for black males 18 to 24 is more
than double the rate for black male homicide victims age 25 and older
and nearly four times the rate for black males 14 to 17 years old.
Among offenders, black males in that same 18-to-24-year-old category
are likely to commit a homicide at a rate more than three times that of
black males 14 to 17 and five times the rate for black males 25 and
older. The focus is on reaching the key 18-to-24 age group. While
V.J. Smith tries to get them to make antiviolence pledges on the
streets in Minneapolis, in nearby St. Paul the Rev. Darryl Spence
engages black youth in conversation and invites them to lemonade
stands. In October, Kenny Gamble and local black leaders asked 10,000
men to patrol streets of Philadelphia. The success or failure of
such programs will be determined by how well public officials
understand that crime cannot be viewed strictly through the prism of
race. Two University of Washington social demographers analyzed
1970 and 1990 census data to examine all forms of violent deaths in
Chicago - homicide, accidental death and suicide - and determine
whether race or economic opportunity was the key predictor. "Both
black and non-black communities show generally similar responses to
endemic joblessness in terms of mortality," Gunnar Almgren, lead author
of the study, said. "Race is not an explanation for differences in
violent death rates. It's about jobs. If you isolate any group from
jobs, it is going to have negative effects, and inner-city
black-community levels of joblessness are higher than any other group." It's
good that crime is being addressed more forthrightly by blacks
themselves. But that development cannot succeed without additional
access to jobs.
Next Column:
A Split Among The Jena 6
Back To Columns |