A Response To Community Violence

Written by Paul Krystyniak and Erik Howard for Inside Southwest Detroit

Five Things That Help Increase Our Access To Safety And Sense Of Community:

Murders, drug dealing, home invasions, arson, dumping, and gang violence make for juicy headlines.  Especially when these things happen in neighborhoods in Southwest Detroit.  At times, they seem to be the only headlines (or conversation) people are interested in even when they are not the only ones available.

This article is not about the media and our problems with their reporting. That is a wholly separate issue.  It is about the people who consume media (us), and what we do and don't do with the information.  It's also about the information that we are not receiving and/or not passing along.  It is important to be aware of what is happening around us.  However, news about violent incidents regularly energizes only a few key populations: those that will respond with a new policy, an organized action, an emotional response, or idle gossip.  Often responses come from activists, police, vigilantes, policy makers, victims, or outside spectators.  These groups are either a very small group on the front lines of decision-making and community issues, or a larger non-involved group who value the news as entertainment.  What about the rest of us? Where are we looking to get our information?  What are we doing with the information we receive?

This article is a response to recent violence in the community for everyone who lives or has a stake in the community. It is for the "rest of us": the people whose collective actions inspire and impact the mood in the community.  It is for people who live next door, who walk to school, who shop at the local grocery store, who are related to the victims and the perpetrators, people who don't want to leave their house, people who take the bus, people who play at the park, and people who were here when it happened and will still be here when things get worse and then better again. We believe that we (this group) are the extreme majority.  We believe that we are not being equipped with a balanced account of what takes place in our community and what we can do to enjoy or change it.  This may be, in part, our own fault.  But at the end of the day we have power to shift the tide when we decide that is what needs to happen.  That is why this article was written.  It should start a dialog about how we see, how we feel, what we say, and what we do in our neighborhoods when bad news discourages us.  Our aim is that that this dialog is not one-sided, so responses of all kinds are welcomed and encouraged.

Times like these in Southwest Detroit (or any community) are definitive moments. We have seen this before and we will see it again.  When a community is in the midst of a string of violent incidents, it is a natural response to start talking and feeling differently about the community.  Each incident and each conversation about recent events can be tipping points for the "mood" of the community. At minimum, we are deciding through conversations inside and outside of our homes and our community how to feel, act, and respond to violent incidents.  This process is fragile and important in determining how a community will respond to its circumstances and resulting conditions.

What is happening?  Why is it happening?  Are we all unsafe?  What is the problem?  How do you address it?  Who is helping?  Who gets to tell us what is happening and why?  These are all questions that have to be worked through by individual community members and the community as a whole.

There are some simple things that we can do to embrace the safety and sense of community that we do have access to today. Participating in the suggestions below as individuals increases our access to these and also is an exercise of support and promotion of them.  Experiencing them together with others creates and strengthens relationships that we can tap in to improve the quality of our experience in our community tomorrow.

1. Share Time and Space

Enjoy some indoor time with family and friends in new ways. Look for opportunities to get together with others who live close to do things you normally don't do together.  If you have a favorite television series or like to watch the games find who will be doing the same thing at the same time anyway.  Do it together.  Play time with the kids, chores/tasks around the house, and cooking are all better with company.  And when the company lives close it is even easier.

Opening your home or other private space (porch, front or back yard, garage) to people you love and care about is an exercise in hospitality.  And it often encourages others to do the same.  This is an easy way to strengthen our bonds with people we trust and care for simply by spending time together.  At the same time it helps to build community.

2. Put Your Eyes (And Feet) On The Street 

Come outside!!Porches, parks, and sidewalks: populate them. This is something you can do with others from your house or with people down the street.  It is something you can do casually or something that you can plan to do with a small group.  If you decide to leave the porch and take to the sidewalk, then pick a destination.  It makes it much easier to organize as you can have others meet you at the park or somewhere else enjoyable.  It is fun, it is easy, and it increases our presence all over the community.  It has been proven in communities across the globe that with increased presence of residents in a community comes a decrease in crime.

Having visible fathers walking around, increasing the presence of mothers and children, and in general having more residents out and about helps to create a wider impression of care and concern in the community.  People mix, mingle, and get to know each other better.  Make a point to smile, nod, and/or say hello casually to people who you see because it makes an impression.  Additionally, while you're out on foot you learn to see your neighborhood in lots of new ways by simply putting your eyes and feet on the street instead of driving by at 25+ miles per hour where you miss what's going on at the street level.  And it misses you.

3. Strike Up A Conversation

Think of a neighbor or someone in the neighborhood that is different than you (for example: age, opinions, race) and initiate a light conversation. In the process, you lighten the mood.  Maybe this person is a neighbor, an employee at a business, or even the mail lady.  Of course it should be someone with who you have low to no risk of confrontation.  Chances are whatever differences you have are small in comparison to the current issues in the community.

Keep the conversation light.  Or don't if you're up for a real challenge. But be ready to discover that you may have more in common concerning how you both feel about community than you knew.  Additionally, a relationship can be formed in the process.

4. Recognize An Inspirational Individual

Identify someone in the community who inspires you or who you see as a leader.  Tell them what you think of them. This could be a neighbor, a teacher, or even a business owner or anyone else. By communicating how they make you and other's feel you can encourage them and validate their efforts.  And, if they are inspirational for you, don't they at least deserve that?  Your comment could even motivate them to become more involved or come up with a creative solution to a problem in the community.  This simple act can easily end up greatly benefiting the community.  Recognition feels great!  Pass it on.

5. Help Shape Your Community's Story

Be intentional to talk MORE about community issues, strengths, and assets with others who you know are engaged in the day-to-day struggles and will be involved to help overcome them. Be intentional to talk LESS about community issues with others who are not going to be involved in the problems or the solutions.  This is where toxic dialogue begins.

At times it is even worse than crime itself when there is the perception that it is full of crime and unsafe.  This makes people act differently in ways that further break down community.  Often this perception is out of proportion to the actual risk and often the risk is more closely tied to the daily routine of those affected.  The exceptions to this are much less common, and just that... exceptions.  An inventory and simple plan to reduce high-risk routines or behaviors can reduce your risk of being victimized.  This is true whether you are in an "unsafe" community or not.

Sensational talk about the neighborhood can be tempting because people are always ready to hear about how bad things are. With amazing speed this negative information sharing creates diminished opportunities, backlash, and bias toward a community.  Stopping it prevents rumors and encourages strength-based perspectives.  Spreading the word about community strengths, assets, and opportunities with neighbors and visitors is also contagious.  We have a choice in what gets spread around. You can help to shape your community's story and as a result it can be a story with a much better chance for a happy ending.

The suggestions offered here are successful if they can help identify people, places, and activities where you experience safety and a sense of community and increase how completely and how often you can enjoy these feelings. Spend a week trying to do at least three of the five suggestions.  Afterwards, please share with us some things you did to put these suggestions in to practice!  We will be compiling a list of real stories and suggestions based on your feedback to encourage others to do the same and to show people that we're alive and well here in Southwest Detroit.

Neighborhood Is Buzzing As Cinco de Mayo Approaches

Written by Carmen Mendoza-King for Inside Southwest Detroit

Cars line up on West Vernor. Horns beep and bass shakes the neighborhood through the early night. People wave flags out of car windows. These are just a few signs that the Cinco de Mayo parade in Southwest Detroit is on its way. This highly anticipated parade is the largest annual event celebrated in the community of southwest Detroit. Cinco de Mayo festivities have evolved from a one day parade to a series of celebrations stretching throughout the first week of May.

Since its beginning, generations ago, the Southwest Detroit Cinco de Mayo parade has been growing in size and popularity along with the growth of the local Latino population. Compared to only a decade ago, the parade is a huge version of its former self.  Southwest Detroit residents and non-residents alike pack sidewalks along West Vernor to watch the parade during the first weekend in May.  They enjoy watching Mexican bandas playing on parade floats, young break-dancers, lowrider bikes and cars, and school marching bands.  Following the parade Clark Park has traditionally hosted a variety of festivities such as Mexican folkloric dance performances, music, art, and a sampling of local cuisine sold at booths.

This year the parade is incorporating several changes that will primarily affect the parade route and "official" activities after the parade.  This year the parade will not begin at Patton Park as it has in the past... instead the parade will be two miles long, and will proceed down Vernor from Waterman to 24th Street in Southwest Detroit.  Although there will not be activities at the end of the parade route as in the past, there is PLENTY to do before and after the parade throughout the neighborhood.  Stay tuned to Inside Southwest Detroit for up-to-date information on events!

Check out the Inside Southwest Detroit Community Calendar for happenings:
http://www.insidesouthwest.com/calendar

Download the official 2010 Cinco de Mayo Parade Application:
http://www.insidesouthwest.com/announcements/announcement-southwest-detroit-2010-cinco-de-mayo-parade

Food, Culture, And Community In Southwest Detroit

Written by Kelli Kavanaugh for Inside Southwest Detroit

If Southwest Detroit were a food, what would it be? Take your pick: pierogi filled with potato and cheese, tamales brimming with shredded pork, cheese-filled papusas or doughy gnocci topped with pesto?  And I'm sure I'm missing some kind of cuisine - for my money, one of the best things about living in the area - and I'm on its bleeding eastern edge, Corktown - is the food.  And its not just the restaurants, it's the mercados with produce and meats sometimes fresher than Eastern Market, it's the parking lot taco stands and the bicycle-propelled ice cream "trucks."  It's bakeries and barbeque and cerveza and ceviche and even falafel.

And if food represents anything, it is culture—and Southwest Detroit is blessed with that in spades. Consistently regarded as Detroit's most diverse area and comprised of several distinct neighborhoods, it is boisterous and prayerful, religious and sporting, a late-night party and an early-morning tree planting all at once. Its Anglo, Latino, African-American and Middle Eastern mix make its high school halls look like none other in the city.  And Southwest Detroit would not have it any other way. All the way to the east, in Corktown, you'll find Irish pubs and old wooden homes proudly preserved and in Hubbard Richard, the city's oldest church and a brand-new State of Michigan welcome center and marketplace.  Hubbard Farms has stately homes and a strong reputation for activism. The Michigan Avenue Corridor presents snippets of its Polish past evolving into a new Latino future and Delray, a snapshot of post-industrial history alongside a remarkable military artifact, Fort Wayne.  Where else can you, in a three-block walk, find halal meat and hear bells calling faithful Muslims to prayer, stroll past a historic cemetery, pop into a brand-new Detroit Public Library and finally, slide into a taqueria? That would be W. Vernor near Patton Park.

It is an urban community with many issues, including homelessness, poor air quality, crime and blight.  But is politically active and growing - it was the only area of Detroit to grow in population between the 1990 and 2000 census. And that growth brings hope and a reason to continue to strive for a new Southwest Detroit that exists in solidarity with the old.