Friday, January 21, 2005

Muslims in Memphis fight for right to Bury their Dead--from Tolerance.org


Muslims Fight for Right to Bury Dead

Jan. 6, 2005 -- When Muslims in Memphis tried to build a cemetery, residents feared it would lead to terrorist activity. But mosque representatives only want a place to bury their dead.
By Carrie Kilman | Staff Writer, Tolerance.org

Muhammed Zaman just wanted a place to bury the dead.

Zaman's mosque, one of six or so in the Memphis area, was paying for space at a private cemetery, some 45 miles away, that was nearing capacity.

But when the Muslim Society of Memphis asked a suburban planning board for permission to build an Islamic cemetery closer to town, in an area with several other cemeteries, the community responded with outrage.

"We don't need bin Laden's cousins in our neighborhood," said one Fayette County resident during a public hearing.

"We know for a fact that Muslim mosques have been used as terrorist hideouts," argued another, who later likened Muslims to Nazis.

Worried that the public outcry might pressure county commissioners to deny the request, the Muslim Society temporarily withdrew its application. But Zaman, who teaches at the University of Tennessee's medical school, says the group is determined to prevail over the racist rhetoric.

"We are not quitting. We did not withdraw to give up," Zaman says. "We live and work here. Our children and our grandchildren were born here. We should be able to bury our dead."

Building bridges
The rhetoric in Memphis is typical of the ongoing, post-9.11 backlash against Muslim Americans.

But, in light of a recent Cornell University survey, the case is noteworthy for another reason: It shows what can happen when Muslims and non-Muslims get to know each other.

In the nationwide survey released last month, 44% of Americans said they supported placing restrictions on Muslim Americans' civil liberties.

The same study also noted that support for such limitations increased when respondents watched more television news, and decreased when respondents had personal relationships with Muslims.

Zaman saw proof of this in Memphis, when some of the mosque's most vocal supporters came from the Methodist church next door.

"We come at our faith from different angles, but we have to build bridges rather than tear bridges down," says Kent Bailey, minister of St. Luke's United Methodist, who wrote a letter to the editor in support of the cemetery proposal.

The close proximity of the two houses of worship has created a Petri dish for Christian-Muslim understanding.

It started when St. Luke's began loaning its parking lot to mosque worshippers each Friday afternoon. Later, a mosque member taught a Middle Eastern cooking class for the church's congregants.

But most impressive, says Bailey, is that on Sept. 11, 2002, Muslims and Methodists came together at St. Luke's for a joint commemoration of the one-year anniversary of 9.11.

"It was Muslim extremists who attacked our country; it wasn't the Muslims across the street," says Bailey, who received hate mail for his letter to the editor. "There are fanatics in all faiths, including Christianity."

An uncertain future
For now, the 27-acre plot of land on the outskirts of Memphis remains empty.

The Muslim Society still has a few options: It could resubmit its application; file a lawsuit; or build a mosque on the land, which would guarantee the right to build a cemetery. The group says it hopes to announce a new plan within the next few days.

In the future, says Zaman, the most effective way to side step such conflicts is to increase cultural awareness between Muslims and non-Muslims and to encourage Americans to become critical consumers of the media.

"Both sides need to interact with each other, instead of relying on CNN or FOX News to determine our point of view," Zaman says. "What do our opponents believe? What they have seen on TV, or what they actually experience?"

Contact us for permission to reprint this article. Please include the name of the article in your request.


For More information please visit: www.Tolerance.org

Do These Type of Lyrics promote violence? E-Mail me your thoughts--

intro]
Snooooooooop..
Snooooooooop..

[chorus- snoop dogg]
When the pimp's in the crib ma
Drop it like it's hot
Drop it like it's hot
Drop it like it's hot
When the pigs try to get at ya
Park it like it's hot
Park it like it's hot
Park it like it's hot
And if a nigga get a attitude
Pop it like it's hot
Pop it like it's hot
Pop it like it's hot
I got the rolly on my arm and I'm pourin Sean Don
And I roll the best weed cause I got it goin on

[verse- pharrell williams]
Uh! I'm a nice dude, with some nice dreams
See these ice cubes, see these ice creams
Eligible bachelor, million dollar boat
That's whiter than what's spillin down your throat
The Phantom, exterior like fish eggs
The interior like suicide wrist red
I can exercise you, this can be your Phys. Ed
Cheat on yo man ma, that's how you get ahizzead
Killer wit the beat, I know the killers in the street
Wit the steel that'll make you feel like Chinchilla in the heat
So don't try to run up on my ear talkin all that raspy shit
Tryin to ask me shit
When my niggaz fill ya vest they ain't gon pass me shit
You should think about it, take a second
Matter fact, you should take four B
And think before you fuck wit lil skateboard P

[chorus- snoop dogg]
When the pimp's in the crib ma
Drop it like it's hot
Drop it like it's hot
Drop it like it's hot
When the pigs try to get at ya
Park it like it's hot
Park it like it's hot
Park it like it's hot
And if a nigga get a attitude
Pop it like it's hot
Pop it like it's hot
Pop it like it's hot
I got the rolly on my arm and I'm pourin Sean Don
And I roll the best weed cause I got it goin on

[verse- snoop dogg]
I'm a gangsta, but y'all knew that
Da Big Bo$$ Dogg, yeah I had to do that
I keep a blue flag hangin out my backside
But only on the left side, yeah that's the Crip side
Ain't no other way to play the game the way i play
I cut so much you thought i was a DJ
[scratches] "two!" - "one!" - "yep, three!"
S-N double O-P, D-O double G
I can't fake it, just break it, and when I take it
See I specialize in makin all the girls get naked
So bring your friends, all of y'all come inside
We got world premiere right here, now get live!
So don't change the dizzle, turn it up a little
I got a livin room full of fine dime brizzles
Watin on the Pizzle, the Dizzle and the Shizzle
G's to the bizzack, now ladies here we gizzo

[chorus- snoop dogg]
When the pimp's in the crib ma
Drop it like it's hot
Drop it like it's hot
Drop it like it's hot
When the pigs try to get at ya
Park it like it's hot
Park it like it's hot
Park it like it's hot
And if a nigga get a attitude
Pop it like it's hot
Pop it like it's hot
Pop it like it's hot
I got the rolly on my arm and I'm pourin Sean Don
And I roll the best weed cause I got it goin on

[verse- snoop dogg]
I'm a bad boy, wit a lotta ho's
Drive my own cars, and wear my own clothes
I hang out tough, I'm a real Bo$$
Big Snoop Dogg, yea he's so sharp
On the TV screen and in the magazines
If you play me close, you're on a red beam
Oh you got a gun so you wanna pop back?
AK47 now nigga, stop that!
C mid shoes, now I'm on the move
You're family's cryin, now you on the news
They can't find you, and now thye miss you
Must I remind you I'm only here to twist you
Pistol whip you, dip you then flip you
Then dance to this motherfuckin music we crip to
Suscribe nigga, get yo issue
Baby come close, let me see how you get loose!

[chorus- snoop dogg]
When the pimp's in the crib ma
Drop it like it's hot
Drop it like it's hot
Drop it like it's hot
When the pigs try to get at ya
Park it like it's hot
Park it like it's hot
Park it like it's hot
And if a nigga get a attitude
Pop it like it's hot
Pop it like it's hot
Pop it like it's hot
I got the rolly on my arm and I'm pourin Sean Don
And I roll the best weed cause I got it goin on

[outro]
Snoooooooop..
Snoooooooop..

Saturday, January 15, 2005

CNN Story about the Philadelphia Gun Court

Philadelphia opens 'gun court'


PHILADELPHIA, Pennsylvania (AP) -- Court officials frustrated with their inability to dam the flood of illegal handguns on Philadelphia's streets are hoping they'll do better by targeting people who break gun laws.

The city on Monday opened its first courtroom dedicated solely to gun possession cases. The muscle of the so-called "gun court" will be probation officers who'll have a lighter-than-normal caseload (75 clients apiece, rather than the standard 236) so they can spend more time checking on offenders.

People on probation for gun crimes will be expected to meet with probation officials at least once a week, rather than the usual once a month. Some will be subjected to unannounced home visits by police and to random drug tests. Most will be required to attend anti-violence or anger management counseling sessions.

They'll also have their cases handled by a single judge who will also review how people are complying with the program.

The gun court won't handle cases involving violence, and people will be diverted to the program only if gun possession is the most serious crime they face. Many who appear are likely to be facing only a short jail sentence or probation.

"We are trying to prevent them from ever offending again," District Attorney Lynne Abraham said. "By focusing on intense tracking and tracing and supervision, we might dissuade this person from thinking it is OK to carry a gun."

The program has been modeled, in part, on "drug court" programs in which people facing drug possession charges are diverted into lengthy, court-supervised treatment programs rather than being sent to prison.

It's unclear how successfully the idea will translate to guns in Philadelphia, where shootings are reported several times a day and where there were 328 murders last year.

The first defendant to appear in the new court, Joseph Washington, was 48 and had never been arrested before. A police officer found a gun in the car Washington was driving after a traffic stop.

"It was a mistake," said Washington, who pleaded guilty. Judge Jeffrey Minehart sentenced him to three years of probation.

Other cities have experimented with courts specializing in gun crimes, with varying methods and goals.

Providence, Rhode Island, opened a gun court in 1994, and prosecutors said it has been very efficient. Before, the average gun case in Providence took nearly a year and a half to complete. Now it takes about six months.

When New York opened a gun court in Brooklyn in 2003, one of its goals was to encourage adherence to the state's sentencing rules for gun crimes. The result has been longer jail terms for offenders, and a sharp increase in the number of inmates serving at least a year in jail for illegally possessing a gun.

Copyright 2005 The Associated Press. All rights reserved.This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.



Find this article at:
http://www.cnn.com/2005/LAW/01/11/guncourt.ap/index.html

Drug Gangs Spark Urban Violence

Drug Gangs Spark Urban Violence
1/14/2005


Communities that defy the generally downward trend in violent crime continue to struggle with drug-related gang violence, the Christian Science Monitor reported Jan. 10.

Cities like Chicago have enjoyed good success in cutting down their overall number of homicides in recent years -- in 2004, for example, 151 fewer people were murdered in Chicago than in 2003, a decline of 25 percent. Far fewer gun crimes also were reported. Washington, New York, Philadelphia, Phoenix, Oakland, and Miami also had fewer killings.

But homicides were up in St. Louis, Baltimore, Detroit, and Boston, with experts pointing to stubborn problems with gang and drug violence, particularly among juveniles, as one cause.

Chicago's success is credited to better tracking of crime and better deployment of police. "If a shooting occurred in a certain gang area, it didn't take too much to realize there would be a retaliatory shooting" and for police to respond before the revenge killing could take place, a Chicago police official pointed out.

Chicago police also stepped up street-level drug enforcement, and seized more than 10,000 guns.

Baltimore, on the other hand, has seen a spike in killings even as the long-term trend has been downward. Community leaders blame drugs and a culture that glorifies thuggish behavior.

This article is online at http://www.jointogether.org/y/0,2521,575655,00.html


This information may be freely reproduced and distributed, provided that attribution is made to "Join Together Online (www.jointogether.org)."
Join Together is a project of the Boston University School of Public Health.

Tuesday, January 11, 2005

A Lesson at Boys State


Leifel Jackson and Steve Nawojczyk at Boys State--

Coroner, former gang leader tell Boys State of harsh street war realities
By KODY FORD
Log Cabin Staff Writer
June 3, 2004




Ten years ago, an HBO documentary, "Gang War: Bangin' in Little Rock," prominently featured two central Arkansans - then Pulaski County coroner Steve Nawojczyk and a Crip gangleader named Leifel Jackson.
A decade later, the two men stood on the same stage in Main Hall at the University of Central Arkansas speaking to Boys State delegates about the dangers of gangs and the gang culture.
Nawojczyk served as Pulaski county coroner from 1983 to 1994. He became famous on the streets and on television because of his desire to stop the deaths surrounding gang violence; he used photographs of slain members and bystanders.
Nawojczyk said at first it was hard infiltrating street culture, but the photographs, which gang members often called Nawojczyk's "ghetto pass," allowed the coroner to move unharmed in and out of gang territory.
But not after having a hit put on him by a prominent Crip/drug dealer. The hit was later repealed.
From 1992 to 1993, Little Rock had a higher per-capita murder rate than Los Angeles and New York. In 1988, the Centers for Disease Control sent Nawojczyk a directive saying to report all deaths of African-American males under age 19, because the homicides among this demographic were being considered an epidemic.
He stressed that often victims of gang violence are not gang members but are bystanders.
Nawojczyk says, "Bullets don't have names on them."
This year, according to Nawojczyk, 10,000 people will die from gunshot wounds and 400 of those will be under 18.
Throughout his time reaching out to inner-city youth, Nawojczyk said the gang members and at-risk youth belonged to the "Five-H Club," meaning they were "hopeless, homeless, helpless, hungry and hugless."
Nawojczyk, who currently serves as Director for Juvenile Services for North Little Rock, says the key to stopping violence is simple.
"These kids join gangs because they want identification, recognition, belonging, discipline, love and respect," said Nawojczyk. "Every community must offer this to children."
After he finished, Nawojczyk brought Jackson to the stage. The former gangleader made a confession.
"A long time ago, I put a hit on Steve and if it had gone through, I wouldn't be standing here today," said Jackson.
Jackson thought Nawojczyk was an undercover narcotics officer out to infiltrate Jackson's drug ring. Eventually, Jackson realized why Nawojczyk was visiting his neighborhood.
Jackson, who spent eight-and-a-half years in prison before being released about two years ago, had a thriving drug ring in the Little Rock area. At its peak, Jackson says he was making around $80,000 a day. Shortly before he was arraigned, Jackson's home burned along with the $1 million in cash he kept inside.
"I always cared about the community," said Jackson. "I'd take kids to skate every few weeks, buy them shoes or food if they needed it. I thought selling dope helped the community.
"But how do you justify people dying by taking kids skating and buying them shoes? You can't."
At age 12, Jackson began smoking marijuana and by 14 he was mainlining hard drugs including cocaine. He said he fell prey to two myths growing up.
"I heard two lies growing up," said Jackson. "My mother always said 'Go to school and everything will be all right.' I went but I never paid attention. Also everyone said you could just smoke a little marijuana and everything would be okay because it wasn't addictive. Marijuana is a gateway drug."
Today, Jackson has turned his life around. He works as a mentor and tutor at the Sherman Park Our Club in North Little Rock. Jackson feels Our Club is a better way to serve his community.
Recently, Jackson finished filming a sequel to Gang Wars. In the film, Jackson visits with gang members from the original film as they speak out about how gang membership destroyed their lives.
The Boys State delegates seemed very moved by the speakers.
"Leifel made me realize that we have major crime problems here in Arkansas, not just in Los Angeles or New York City," said John Sims, a student at Conway Christian High School.
"His complete turnaround is remarkable since he was in the middle of the gang culture."

Saturday, January 08, 2005

Are Gangs Making A Comeback?

According to William Bratton, the Chief of the LAPD, yes. Not only in large cities, but nationwide. According to a letter from Bratton, gang homicides have increased 50% in the last few years.

According to a 2003 survey done by the National Youth Gang Center, 100% of cities with a population above 250,000 reported the presence of gangs, as did 87% of communites from 100,000-250,000.

But that's not all, 38% of suburban counties and 12% of rural counties also report gangs.

No place is immune.

Since 2002, the United States Congress has reduced funding for juvenile related issues by 44% and they are looking at reducing it another 40%.

This is a critical error. Even many hardened police officers will tell you that there must be a careful balance of strong enforcement and strong prevention and intervention.

Steve

Friday, January 07, 2005

A little Neo-Nazi hoedown! Definitely not the Back Street Boys

Intelligence Report - Winter 2004
Youth Recruitment

“Neo-Nazi Label Woos Teens With Hate-Music Sampler”

In one of the most ambitious efforts in recent memory to recruit young people to the white-power movement, neo-Nazi Panzerfaust Records began a mass distribution of 100,000 hate-music CDs in September. Dubbed “Project Schoolyard USA,” the campaign targets white teenagers with an inexpensive 20-song sampler of Panzerfaust bands. According to the Minnesota-based label, the aim is not only to “entertain racist kids,” but also to “create them.” Panzerfaust is offering the CD for just 15 cents apiece, making it easy for neo-Nazis to order them in bulk and distribute them for free to middle-school and high-school kids.

The guitar-heavy CD features hard-driving tunes with lyrics like these from the Bully Boys: “Whiskey bottles/baseball bats/pickup trucks/and rebel flags/we’re going on the town tonight/hit and run/let’s have some fun/we’ve got jigaboos on the run.” In “Wrecking Ball,” a band called H8Machine advises kids to “destroy all your enemies,” promising, “The best things come to those who hate.”

“Hopefully it will have a big impact on these kids who would otherwise get into rap,” wrote Panzerfaust’s Bryant Cecchini (a convicted felon who also goes by the alias of Byron Calvert) on the label’s Web site. “It’s the wigger kids [whites who emulate black street culture] that we are making this CD for.” Cecchini, formerly warehouse manager for neo-Nazi Resistance Records, claims to have purchased mailing lists of teens who subscribe to skateboard and heavy metal magazines.

When the first shipment of 20,000 CDs went out in September, Cecchini reported on his Project Schoolyard Web site, the entire batch was scarfed up in just two weeks. Cecchini said kids were telling him “our music blows away anything they hear on MTV,” and added, “[W]e know the impact that is possible when kids are introduced to white nationalism through the musical medium.”

In October, Panzerfaust’s scheme hit a roadblock – in Madison, W. Va., at least. Officials at Madison Middle School and Scott High School confiscated copies from about 40 students who said they’d been handed the CDs as they walked to school or boarded buses earlier in the week. That didn’t sit well with Cecchini, who called Scott Principal Leonard Bolton and threatened legal action against the school in a profanity-laced tirade that he taped and posted on the Panzerfaust Web site. Cecchini claimed he had been contacted by “several students” who said the principal told them they would “burn in hell” if they listened to the CDs. “You had no authority to confiscate those CDs,” Cecchini bellowed into the phone.

He was just getting warmed up. “I suggest you mind your fucking business and stop stealing CDs from your students before you get the shit sued out of you,” Cecchini told Principal Bolton. “I may not be able to force you to return the CDs to those kids, but since your students have contacted me and they like this music so much, I’m going to send them enough fucking CDs to give one to every goddamn kid in that school.”

www.tolerance.org

Tuesday, January 04, 2005

A Little Gang Action in "Joisey".

New York Times

Shooting in Downtown Newark Leaves One Dead and Four Hurt -December 26, 2004
By DAMIEN CAVE


One man died and four people were injured yesterday in an early morning shooting at a Newark housing project near downtown, the police said.

The violence started about 3:30 a.m. Lloyd Westry, 24, of Newark was standing with several friends in a concrete courtyard within the Baxter Terrace housing complex at 226 Orange Street when several gunshots sounded, according to Carolyn Wright, director of the homicide division for the Essex County prosecutor's office. She said that one or more people had approached on foot and opened fire.

Mr. Westry died at the University of Medicine and Dentistry of New Jersey. Two of the four other people who were injured by gunfire were in critical condition at the same hospital last night; the others had been released by the evening. All are from Newark, but Ms. Wright would not give their names because she said they needed to be protected from potential retaliation.
She said that the police were still investigating whether the killing was gang-related. Less than two weeks ago, another Baxter Terrace resident - Sutton Davis, 22 - was shot to death on South 15th Street. Yesterday's killing was the ninth recorded in Newark since Thanksgiving, and the 86th this year. There were 83 homicides in 2003, and 68 in 2002. Newark's population is 270,000.

Residents of the complex, a set of three-story brick structures where the ground is littered with crack vials and garbage, said yesterday that the killing was connected to an argument that took place that night at a nearby bar, Layers.
Bernard McDaniels, 49, Mr. Westry's uncle, said that his nephew was single, and was studying carpentry at a local trade school.

"I saw him last night," he said. "I was kidding with him: I was looking for a Christmas present for him, he was looking for a Christmas present for me."

By early afternoon, a shrine to Mr. Westry had been set up in the courtyard. Three candles and a bottle of Cognac sat on the ground where blood could still be seen. On a nearby wall, there was a message in black magic marker that included the line, "R.I.P., I love you brother Lloyd."
Ms. Wright said that no arrests had been made.

Before Mr.Westry's death, 45 of this year's killings were unsolved, and with his death, the homicide rate in Newark - the number of killings per 100,000 people each year - is 31.9, more than twice the rate in the country's 10 largest cities and nearly five times the homicide rate of New York City, according to federal crime statistics.

Three days ago, Mayor Sharpe James convened an antiviolence summit meeting and announced plans to add 80 officers and open seven new neighborhood precincts in 2005. Since Nov.
26, when four people were found fatally shot in a lot near a church on the city's south side, he has downplayed the violence, declaring that crime is down over the past decade.
Ms. Wright said that the violence seemed to fit with what has become a violent pattern. "One would always hope that one would spend the holiday with family and loved ones and not be involved in violence, but we live in a very violent society," she said. "It doesn't seem to change with the season or holiday."

Janon Fisher contributed reporting for this article. From the NEW YORK TIMES

Monday, January 03, 2005

Has the MS-13 moved to your town?

Here is some information about MS-13 about whom I get a lot of inquiries--- suffice it to say, they are a very serious group with very serious tactics--


SOURCE: US Office of Domestic Preparedness

12/29 (Townhall) 2004 was a good year for terrorists, violent gang members,
law-breakers and fraud artists seeking safe haven in America.

The rise of MS-13 . The savage El Salvador-based gang, Mara Salvatrucha
(MS-13), has now penetrated more than a dozen states. In May, a Fairfax,
Va., teenager had his fingers chopped off in an MS-13 machete attack. In
November, Washington, D.C.-area police received warning that MS-13 is
plotting to ambush and kill them when they respond to service calls. Active
in alien, drug and weapons smuggling, MS-13 members in America have been
tied to numerous killings, robberies, carjackings, extortions and rapes. The
gang has also been linked to efforts to help al Qaeda infiltrate the
U.S.-Mexico border.

A Study of Alcohol and Addiction among Gang Members

Here is a link to a study of the connection between gangsters and addiction.

http://www.niaaa.nih.gov/publications/arh25-1/66-71.htm

Sunday, January 02, 2005

A Message from Inside the Walls of the Arkansas Dept. of Corrections--

Gang War Bangin' In Little Rock
Adam Borel is a young man from my hometown. He went to prison when he was 18. He made a fatal error in judgement and knows that now. He's had a couple of birthdays behind walls and is keeping a journal titled, "Do You Feel Me: Thoughts from Behind Blue Eyes" and he sometimes shares parts of it with me. Here is a short excerpt:

" I'm trying not to give up hope but how should I really feel? I'm really torn up inside! Everyday, I wake up, I am faced with the same people, guards, situations, choices and I don't want to slip into a routine that will be the same for 7 more years. I have so much potential. I just need a chance. Dreams of home fade by the many. Sometimes fears replace all the memories. Prison is a place to forget all about. Reflect on problems and troubles while I was out. Why does it drive me crazy? I don't understand what this is really about. Does it have a purpose or even a chance to have meaning? Sometimes I feel like a voodoo doll. A sharp poke makes me speechless, but the pin is removed only to be stuck again-- deeper into my soul. A tear breaks the surface only to be dried by a towel soaked by the tears that were shed for the problems to come. I'm desperate and I want to come home. What do I need to do? "

Adam has reflected a great deal on his life and he has helped me by corresponding with other young people who are on the precipice of danger. His story is an amazing one and he would love to hear from anyone who might like to know his story. You can write to Adam at:

Adam Borel
ADC 128092
7500 Correctional Circle
Pine Bluff, AR 71603

So are hate groups gangs?

Gang War Bangin' In Little Rock I got an interesting email from a young man this morning who is a member of a neo-nazi supremacist group. He wondered why I didn't consider hate groups as gangs. Are they? I'm not sure. I know they are categorized as "Security Threat Groups" in prisons and jails. As far as kids joining, I suspect it is only who got to them first. If they are struggling in life and feel they don't belong to anything, any open arms are a welcome sight. It matters not who the arms belong to, only that they are open... To beat gangs, compete with them. S/