Council for Unity helps gang members leave behind lives of crime …

dewey high john school

NEW YORK: DaJuan Hawkins spent four months in jail for assault and thought he was a “nothing” destined for a life of street crime.
Today, the 17-year-old high school senior is heading for college and writing poetry.
Bobby Marchesi hung out with a tough group of Italian boys who clashed violently with black kids at his Brooklyn high school. Now, he is a lawyer in private practice.
What transformed Hawkins and Marchesi into confident, productive and compassionate human beings, they say, is Council For Unity.
Founded as a small anti-gang group in 1975, the council now claims to reach 100,000 people of all cultures in New York, Milwaukee, San Francisco and Vermont — and as far away as Nigeria and Moldova.
And its mission has expanded: The group recently published a book of student writings. It works with families and in correctional facilities. It is developing a public safety curriculum in partnership with police in Riverhead, Long Island.
The group's story begins with its founder, Bob De Sena, a one-time gang member and former English teacher at the once-troubled John Dewey High School, the same Brooklyn school Marchesi attended.
De Sena said he turned his life around because someone gave him a second chance. He wants the Council For Unity to do the same for new generations of kids from broken homes and crime-ridden neighborhoods.
The group has a 33-year history of getting gang members together to talk, based on a message that when you bring everybody together, there is nobody left to fight.
At Christopher Columbus High School in the Bronx, gang activity ceased altogether after the group's classes were introduced into the curriculum, principal Lisa Maffei Fuentes said. She said her school was on the city's most dangerous list three years ago.
“They've come to respect their home site, their school,” she said.

iht.com


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This entry was posted on Thursday, March 27th, 2008 at 1:15 pm and is filed under Uncategorized. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

7 Responses to “Council for Unity helps gang members leave behind lives of crime …”

  1. Jericho Says:

    up this if you think Ron Paul is too old and somewhat crazy.up this if you think Barak Obama is too black and somewhat crazy.up this if you think Hillary Clinton is a menopausal cunt and somewhat crazy.up this if you think Mitt Romney is too Mormon and somewhat crazy.up this if you think Mike Huckabee is too evangelical and somewhat crazy.hey reddit, if it’s okay for you to discriminate on age, then it’s okay to discriminate on race, gender, and religion.

  2. Shawn Says:

    Didn’t hurt Reagan.Not that he was an example of a good politician.A lot of people still think he was, though.Of course, compared to Bush………

  3. Ralphie Says:

    Downvoted. If you’re going to submit, please pay attention to what you’re typing.

  4. Adeline Says:

    “McCain in reference to al Qaeda”fixed that for you.

  5. Melva Says:

    You do realise that McCain is younger than Paul, right?

  6. Raven Says:

    He’s not too old. Cannot comment on “crazy.” What’s most troubling about McCain is that he used to have the veneer of integrity, which is so unusual in a person who’s been in politics as long as he has. You could point to public statements and votes and say, “yeah, this guy has a conscience and is willing to buck the partyline to do what’s right.”Unfortunately, after the 2000 presidential race, McCain sold out, lock, stock, and barrel. That’s not leadership.For the record, I was once a “troop” and I know that you don’t support the troops by keeping them in the line of fire attempting to accomplish a mission that is permanently FUBAR. You support the troops by giving them clear, attainable objectives, supplying them with the resources they need, and taking care of our veterans.Is anybody else in the US looking at what appears to be our remaining 4 or 5 presidential candidates and asking themselves, “Is this the best we can do?”