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| This
article is exactly as appeared in the Los Angeles Times as it was
written by |
Luis
J. Rodriguez |
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Gang
related violence are up in the city after years of falling rates.
Government, businesses and religious leaders, community activists,
law enforcement and social agencies are scrambling to propose plans
to curtail the violence. Yet, most of these well-meaning attempts
will fail. |
| For
one thing, the the responses reek of old strategies that can be lumped
under the catchall heading of "anti gang." One newly formed
coalition of activists, for example, called for more funding for anti-gang
programs. But what's needed is not more "anti" policies.
Instead, pro youth, pro community, pro family,pro-compassion and pro-the-long-haul
policies are needed. |
| This
is why the anti-gang units of the Los Angeles Police Department had
to be dismantled. CRASH essentially created a larger, better armed
gang to deal with gangs. As we've seen with Rampart, this only invited
abuse and criminal activities. The innocent got pulled in with the
guilty. People were framed. Others were killed or maimed. |
| This
also undermined what little confidence people had in law-enforcement.
I don't buy the argument that the demise of the anti gang unit has
emboldened gang members to become more visible. But even if this were
true, returning to CRASH or similar tactic shouldn't be on anyone's
agenda. |
| It's
time to imagine a new peace process. |
| This
means reaching out to the very people who are supposedly behind the
violence. Yes, the gangs and youth most affected by them.This has
to include street leaders, many of whom wield more palabra
or juice than any police officer, school official or outside youth
organizer will ever have. |
| There
is a new generation of gang leaders establishing themselves in the
streets. They shouldn't be dismissed or demonized out of hand. However,
these youth are not going to respond to halfhearted peace efforts,
empty promises or even threats. There will have to be consistent,
continuing and painstaking street work to determine who and what is
behind the upsurge in violence. |
| It's
time to bring the up-and-coming leaders to the table and to set up
the proper mentoring and teaching so these leaders can become competent
agents of peace instead of war. Most officials and agencies have been
afraid to try this approach. but it's the one that in the past resulted
in a measure of peace. It wasn't that long ago that war zones in South
Central, the Northeast San Fernando Valley, and East L.A. saw violence
fall after leading gang members were involved in peacekeeping. |
| This
is not to downplay the pressing need for a long-range comprehensive
response that includes decent, well-paying jobs, life and skills training
greater education opportunities and drug and psychological treatment. |
| But
there must also be "fire brigades"To manage hot spots of
gang violence. These brigades should include the players that have
already forged peace in the communities through street ministries,
gang intervention projects and truce efforts. Among these groups are
N.O.G.U.N.S., Unity One, Barrios Unidos, Communities in Schools, The
Assn. of Community-Based Gang Intervention Workers, Amer-I-Can, the
Urban Peace Network and Homies Unidos, the Pico-Union Group hard hit
by Rampart officers. |
| These
are the Peacemakers, some of whom are former gang members who still
have an ear to the ground. They daily struggle with the most-troubled
youth, defusing violent confrontations; they take them to sports events,
defeating by culture outings or the woods; they link them to work
or alternate schools; they involve the youth in programs that give
back to community through active service. |
| One
of the peacemakers is Frank Chavez a former drug user and gang member
who now holds a masters degree. Despite severe health problems, he
helps bring indigenous spirituality to East L.A. gang youth. Others
include William "Blinky" Rodriguez of the San Fernando Valley
and Henery Toscano of East L.A., who have taken their ministries for
Christ among the people nobody else will work with. |
| There
are many others, like Alex Sanchez, the former gang member and Homies
Unidos activist now threatened with deportation after his arrest by
Rampart officers, allegedly in violation of LAPD policy. Its people
like them who have saved countless lives, yet most don't get recognized
or paid commensurate with their skills. |
| These
piece workers continue work despite having attended too many funerals,
seeing to many of their charges sent to prison for extraordinary amounts
of time and having been shortchanged by government and business representatives
time and time again. Some peacemakers have have put in five, 10 even
30 years of work. Some have lost their own children to violence or
prison. They've been at the press conferences and sat in countless
meetings with bureaucrats. They've faced character assassinations.
Yet, regardless of setbacks, they're putting their lives on the line
without fanfare or meaningful support. |
| It's
clear we can't go back to the fragmentation and repressive police
tactics that have characterized ant-crime efforts. Peace is a processes.
It is a plan. It is a way of life. |
| It's
time for politicians, businesses, schools, churches and law-enforcement
to align with what these street workers and peacemakers have been
doing to make peace in the community a reality. |
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