Pubdate: Fri, 06 Jan 2006 Source: Arthur Enterprise News (CN ON) Copyright: 2006 Arthur Enterprise News Contact: http://www.wellingtonnorth.com/ Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/2223 Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/racial.htm (Racial Issues) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/youth.htm (Youth) Bookmark: http://www.mapinc.org/opinion.htm (Opinion) ENOUGH IS ENOUGH A Boxing Day shopping trip came to a tragic end when gang violence erupted - again - on a downtown Toronto street. Several bystanders were shot, one fatally. The 15-year-old girl was not the city's first murder victim, or the first innocent person shot to death in that city in 2005. But she was the victim who finally got the nation's attention. And the nation is saying a collective, "Enough is enough." We listen to the politicians, each of whom has some sort of simple solution to the situation, but most of us realize there will be no quick fix. Gang violence has been growing and becoming more virulent over the past decade and we fear it will get worse. The reason is not difficult to understand - there are simply too many young men marginalized by poverty, race and lack of education, with few positive role models and limited opportunities. Unlike the Great Depression when nobody had anything, these kids see wealth all around them, on television, in the shops and in their own communities. They want the designer clothes, cell phones, cars and CD players - all the goodies bustling, wealthy Toronto has to offer. Like the rest of us they also want to belong, they want respect and they do not want to be poor. Their immediate world has two types of prosperous people. One is the teachers, doctors and social workers who could serve as examples of what is possible except most of them are white, while most of the poor kids are not. How can a 16-year-old black kid who speaks with a Jamaican accent, lives in a roach-infested apartment complex and is two years behind at school, escape poverty? He looks to the other role models, the black American rap artists who sing about anger, drugs and guns; and the neighbourhood drug dealers. The latter not only represent success, but a form of success that is within easy grasp, no age, race or education requirements. There are dangers, not from the legal system and its threats of probation or community service, but from others trying to get their cut of a very lucrative business. Carrying a gun makes a 16-year-old kid - or even better, a group of them - something to be feared. Those young, gun-toting gangsters need positive role models they can identify with - black youth leaders, teachers, police officers, social workers - who can prove mainstream Canadian society is not colour-coded. They need extra help with education - not just tutoring and counselling, but a safe place to do homework - a place with computer access and someone to answer questions. The idea is not to keep them in school, but for them to learn and achieve success while they are there. If that means breakfast and lunch programs at school, plus help finding the family decent housing and access to a good citizenship lawyer, so be it. And we have to make that neighbourhood drug dealer look like the loser he is instead of a hero - stop him from thumbing his nose at police by imposing realistic penalties for drug and weapons offences. We cannot eliminate crime but we can make it a lot less attractive. There is much to be done on many fronts. Solutions will not be easy or cheap, but they are necessary. We can only pray the situation has not deteriorated beyond the point of no return. - --- MAP posted-by: Larry Seguin