Sunday, August 4, 2013

MORE SUPPORT FOR CORNELL LEWIS /CRITICISM OF DCF

Beyond Irony: the Absurdity of Charges Against Cornell Lewis
On July 4, 2001 a stray bullet from an altercation between two neighborhood drug dealers on Garden Street, inadvertently hit an utterly innocent seven year old, Takira Gaston, shattering her jaw, ripping through her face, and just missing her carotid artery.  The little girl, who had simply been enjoying a holiday celebration with family and friends, underwent multiple surgeries in the first few days following the incident in order just to save her life.  Fortunately, she survived.  But we can only dimly imagine the lifetime of physical and psychological recovery that she has subsequently had to endure.
On July 11, 2001, the Hartford Courant made a courageous and controversial decision to print a front page upper fold photograph of Takira's swollen, battered face, as she lay fighting for her life in hospital bed, with feeding tubes and oxygen mask sustaining her through what was a horrific ordeal.  I will never forget that face.  
In the weeks that followed, as the city erupted in anger and despair, I was to find myself enlisting as a foot soldier in Minister Lewis' fight to take back the streets for the children who live there – forcing the drug dealers, as he put it, to “scurry back in to the shadows and crevices of the city like the cockroaches they resembled”.  Cornell Lewis has a way with words.
For weeks, months, and even years afterward, I followed Minister Lewis as he picketed crack houses, cleared out street corners, occupied playgrounds and escorted elementary school children to the bus stops because they were being sexually harassed and solicited to buy drugs on the way to school.  This effort was to evolve into Hartford's Men of Color Initiative, recruiting responsible neighborhood adults from all walks of life to guard children on street corners at bus stops so that they could safely arrive at school.  It garnered the support of the mayor, the governor and many committed residents who were inspired to stand up to the criminal elements who threatened kids.
Time and time again over the years, I have stood witness as Cornell Lewis has placed his own safety in jeopardy, putting his very body on the line between the weapons of criminals and the children in the streets of Hartford.  This kind of courage, this kinds of determination, and this kind of love, is something that administrators at the Department of Children and Families in Hartford would never dream of, much less attempt on behalf of the city's youth.  
That is why I am appalled and outraged to learn that Cornell Lewis has been dismissed from his job as a Youth Service Officer at the Connecticut Juvenile Training School.  Not only is the Department of Children and Families terminating his employment, they are trying to prevent him from ever being able to work with children again.  If this effort succeeds, it will not be Cornell Lewis that suffers, it will be the kids.  It will also be to the great discredit and misfortune of Department of Families and Children.
Now, I know that Minister Lewis has been outspoken about a pattern of discrimination and harassment against people of color at DCF.  From long personal experience, I also that Cornell Lewis can be difficult to disagree with.  Believe me, I know.  He can be brash and confrontational, blunt and undiplomatic.  He can be relentless.  He can be harshly critical and uncompromising.   But all too often, he is also right.
I also know this.  There are few people who are so well qualified to work with troubled youth.  Administrators and academicians, as well meaning as they might be, can be no match for his stamina, commitment, experience and integrity.  As someone who has “been there, done that”, he understands these kids in a way that few others can.  He knows what they need to turn around.  He knows when to stand up to them and when to give in.  He has given his entire adult life to confronting injustice and protecting children from being victims of violence.  His voice and his perspective are invaluable assets in the effort to address youth crime and rehabilitate young criminals.  I have listened and learned from him as he has spoken loudly, clearly and directly to dangerous criminals who are threatening the city's children.  He has demanded that they respect their community and protect the rights of our children to a safe and carefree childhood.  I have made it a habit to listen to Cornell Lewis... especially when I disagree with him... and I am sadder perhaps, but much wiser when I do.   The Department of Children and Families might well do the same.  

Marcia Morris, Activist New Hampshire

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