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It was naive to think that another week would go by without reading about one more youth getting killed, but I try to be an optimist. Although a 15-year-old boy was shot last week, he did not die, making last week one of the rare weeks a Chicago teen has not gotten killed since I started reporting on education. Not reading about another death made last week feel like an eternity since the last murder. Schools and communities continued to make strides in addressing this problem. People were talking and listening to one another. The sense of urgency was present. But with all of that there, we still find ourselves coming back to reporting the bad news we’ve become used to.
The latest young life taken remains unidentified until family notice. All that is known is that he was found dead in an alley in the Gage Park neighborhood on the South Side.
With the cyclical nature of news, I wanted to share an essay written by journalist Meredith Maran. Maran is the author of the book “Class Dismissed.” It chronicles a year in the life of three teens at Berkley High School, considered to be the most diverse high school in America. One of the teens Maran covered, Keith Stephens, was later shot to death six years after the book’s publication. Maran’s essay touches not only on Stephens’ life and death but hope that Keith Stephens doesn’t just become another statistic or blurb we glance over as we read our newspaper. Keith Stephens, like every Chicago youth killed this school year, had a life behind their headline. They were lives filled with dreams, good and bad days and — most importantly– people who loved them.
That is why I want to propose the following challenge: if you happen to come across a murder on the news ( doesn’t have to be a teen), dig a little deeper and find out something interesting about that person. It can be their favorite movie or something random their family has shared. Any takers?
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I happen to be the sister of Keith Stephens and I’m definitely up for the challenge…….There’s been countless murder’s in the Bay Area since Keith passed away and I’ve just became so numb Your eyes are never truly open to this problem unless homicide touches you life…..I was guilty of that before I lost my brother and you think this would never happen in your family but yes it can It happen to us. Keith was a good kid he had his troubles here and there just like any other kid but not in a million years I would have ever though someone would take Keith Stephens life…………..If you read the book you would know Keith was one of the most likeably guys you would ever come across. We should all dig a little deeper rather than saying “Oh that another dead Black Man”. Dig deeper you never know what an amazing person he could have been. My father’s worst nightmare came about when we lost Keith, he never wanted either of his sons’s to become a statistic and to some that’s all my brother simply is…………………
Comment by Latisha April 23, 2008 @ 5:14 am[...] wanted to share a comment from the previous incarnation of this blog. It is from the sister of Keith Stephens, one of the subjects in the book Class Dismissed. [...]
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