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BALTIMORE (Map, News) - In the aftermath of the riots in Baltimore following the assassination of Martin Luther King Jr. in 1968, city residents faced a grim reality.
“What was most distressing to the residents was when they realized, ‘We destroyed our own access to retail,’ ” said David Stevens, executive director of the Jacob France Institute at the University of Baltimore.
Looting and vandalism affected about 1,000 city businesses in the four days of riots. Most of the rioters were arrested within 10 blocks of their homes, meaning they were likely ruining their neighborhood store, said Peter Levy, chairman of the history and political science department at York College of Pennsylvania.
“It was mostly smaller retail stores that were affected. The bigger department stores were left relatively unscathed,” Levy said. “Some [smaller stores] never recovered.”
Levy and Kara Kunst, a graduate student at the University of Baltimore, studied the riots. Knowing most of the riots occurred along East Monument Street, Edmunson Avenue, Greenmount Avenue, Harford Road and West North Avenue, they surveyed the areas and researched land records to determine which buildings were businesses in 1968.
Kunst studied the effects on businesses in the decade after the riots, saying the number of lawsuits filed by insurance companies from 1968 to 1979 was “absolutely impressive.”
“The big question was, ‘Was the city responsible for the damage to the businesses?’ ” Kunst said. “The insurers were paying out a lot of money to the businesses, and they eventually dropped their suits when they couldn’t prove the city could have done more to prevent the riots.”
Some of the owners of the affected businesses — mostly grocery stores, liquor stores, drugstores and taverns and bars — either tried to reopen but couldn’t or abandoned the venture altogether, Kunst said. The city took control of the abandoned properties and sold them below market value to new owners.
One interesting aspect, Kunst discovered, was the role Korean Americans played in the revival of business in the area of West North Avenue, now called Station North.
“That area had been badly impacted by the riots,” Kunst said. “A large number of Korean Americans that bought the shops and started their own corner stores. If you walk around the area, you can still see the influence today.”
acannarsa@baltimoreexaminer.com



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Examiner Reader said:
The people who blame others for the failure of rebuilding are actually blameing themselves. It's their community, they make it what it is.
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Examiner Reader Joe Nattans (COL USA ret.) said:
I managed the "Reads" at Gay & Forest Sts. and was an Officer in the National Guard at the same time. Called to Duty; I enlisted my Assistant Manager to cover my absence at the drug store with thorough instructions for operation. I was conducting riot supression activities in the Monument St. area not far from the action on Gay St. The BPD later(around 6pm) established a Command Post at Gay & Forest Sts. and ordered the stores in the area still operating to close for employee safety. Those who know that "hot" area of the Riots were amazed that my store was the only one in that block that was not damaged. The answere lies in socio-economic interaction with the community rather than police presence, but that's another discussion.
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BLACKMAN said:
I was 11 years old, turning 12 in August, 1968. I was sitting in a soda shop in Baltimore having a cheeseburger and a cherry Coke. The lady serving me was named Miss Mary. She was a beautiful older black woman who everyone in the community loved and respected. As I was sitting down waiting for my cheeseburger, a gentleman ran into the Reads Drugstore and said, “They done killed the King. The King is dead.” In the beginning, I did not get what he was meaning, and I saw Miss Mary starting to cry… not just tears, but the crying that only an older lady could do… the type that a grandchild of a slave gave, it almost had a musical sound to it, and for the next 40 years I can hear it as clear and as sad as it was then. I went out into the street and I saw men and woman, grown people, stopping what was going on in there lives and crying. I had seen King five years earlier, maybe six, as he stopped in Baltimore to campaign for Kennedy. But this was a death that took the sound out of the
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Examiner Reader said:
I hate it when somebody says 'my people' .
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I escaped Balt. 20 yrs ago said:
Baltimore is one of the most anti-white racist areas I have ever known, and a lot of that racism comes from politically-correct whites themselves. There no hope for "Charm City". It's a disaster.
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Examiner Reader said:
Pretty fitting to end this discussion with our own April Fool, Nakia. You'll notice that she doesn't speak to the strong afro-centric movement's positive effect upon these neighborhoods today. Where are those many strong men and women she talks about ,rearing families ,encouraging their children to gain higher education and assume responsibility for the "community" from their parents. What has happened to the property in these communities after Nakia's strong afro- centric culture supposedly rose from the ashes? Nakia is, as always, all rhetoric and no action. She does not represent an African American work ethic, as so many African Americans have expressed, Where is Nakia while honest men and women are working to rebuild and reclaim their neighborhoods from crime and poverty. There are none so blind as they who will not see.
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Ms. Nakia Barksdale said:
Sure some wealthy whites lost a little property during the 1968 uprising. But for the longest time, my people couldn't own property or vote. Following the uprising a strong and vibrant Afro Centric culture grew. Look at AFRAM (thats what we used to call it), Shake and Bake, the Arch Social Club, The Roost, the Yellow Bowl and the list goes on and on! I am very proud of the African American culture of excellence that arose after the uprising!
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Examiner Reader said:
All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men to do nothing. -Edmund Burke It seems we've always lived in dangerous times, but we can hope there will always be some who refuse to give in to defeat despite the odds. I'm glad that there are people like those in Park Heights who are looking for support from every quarter. After all, the alternative is to abandon the city and that is not an option for the majority of us.
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Examiner Reader said:
Believe me Park Hieghts is no place to have a comfort zone.Even if they could make a differents,it wouldn't last.How many times has these very neighbohoods been rebuild only for them to destroy them again.It's a no win and a waste of time.SAD SORRY BUT TRUE
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Thanks JB said:
You wrote from your head and your heart and from personal experience. No one can fault that. You told many truths. There can be no denial of the facts and figures. These problems are bigger than any single group can solve. Everyone has to find their comfort zone and make a difference where they can.
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JB said:
Standing by what I said about the majority, I do apologize for assuming that the Park Heights group was a certain type of people. However, I do think that the problem is bigger than getting together once a week and talking about things. Having said that, I have no idea what the solution is. I have never been to an area quite as dysfunctional as Baltimore and I have spent time around the world. Baltimore could have all of the potential of the next great city but it would probably take at least a generation to fix. Addicts giving birth to addicts is never a good recipe. Please don't tell me you're going to dispute that, too? There are reasons why we have nicknames like "Heroin Capital of the World" or can walk downtown and see a junkie nodding off on a park bench every block. There are a few neighborhoods in the city that have always terrified me and Park Heights is near the top of the list. I do applaud you for trying to take the bull by the horns giving the likely outcome.
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JB said:
I gave the city a chance for two years. Only after repeatedly being subjected to or a witness of crime, I gave up. I was hit by a drunk driver who fled the scene, got caught and then was left to walk without repeated requests by myself, my passenger and dispatch to perform a field sobriety test. A police chance ended on my terrace with the subject being thrown into my window. My car was broken into numerous times. The list goes on. I spent time on the inside and I saw how pathetic it was. My business involved me going into houses all over the city and I saw how pathetic and lazy the majority are. You can defend Baltimore all you want, but it is what it is. If it was a desirable place to be it wouldn't has lost population even during the "boom years." Probably more than 60% of the people in the city fit every stereotype everybody is trying to argue against. Majority always wins.
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I'll make the call said:
I'm not from Baltimore so I don't know the name and number of the center on 2300 W. North Ave. that a Ms. Thompson who has posted here today has volunteered to work at with the children. I'll make the long distance call and would like to say that she must be a very special woman and she will change lives with this kind of attitude. Please post the information if anyone can find it so I can contact Mr. Williams. Thanks.
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To MS. Thompson said:
When others complained that nothing could be done , you stepped up. Classy lady!
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RE: MS Thompson said:
You're a heroine and a mentor. Anything you do to help our children helps all of us. THANK YOU!
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Examiner Reader said:
C'mon, some of you guys are describing Baltimore like it was Mogadishu. Ok we got some problems, BIG problems and I know somebody is going to list comparisons between the two places but we've got some BIG advantages too. It isn't all bad here and we're not helpless. Lets take advantage of our advantages.
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COP says said:
Excuse me sir but I care and if you read some of these messages you'll see a lot of other people do too.
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Examiner Reader said:
One look at the city in it's current state of decline, and you can't help but feel a great sense of loss. What was once a fun city, where neighbors actually enjoyed on another, was deteriorated into a crumbling wasteland, where half of high schools students wont graduate. Once clean streets are now filthy, littered with both the trash, and the trashy. What's left is a crime-ridden wasteland where drugs are the preferred currency. Ah, what the hell....nobody cares
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COP says said:
Sorry, I meant 11:49...told you I wasn't perfect! I still work for you.
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Examiner Reader said:
Examiner, did you really have to display the picture of the dead body of James Harrison (1968 riot picture) laying in an allyway after being shot by police who were chasing him from a looted liquor store with several white cops standing around him in your paper this morning? Was this absolutely necessary? Was this the only picture you could find? Oh, but I forgot, I asking this question to a newspaper, who have a mercy or shame. You are just a publishing whore mogul.
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Not sure what a MSG. Board Warrior is Exactly said:
But I am a cop and I can't say I've read any tough guy comments. I could cut the anger and frustration with a knife though. I was glad to see there is a group formed in Park Heights. Think it might be a really good idea for 11:29 to take it down a notch and look up the def. for coward. Just keeping the peace you know.Everybody breathe. I do have a comment and sug. for any one looking to begin to take back their neighborhood. I think you should get some neighbors together a couple of times and get your thoughts clear and put them on paper. Then, call the station and ask for an officer to come to your next mtg. Somebody WILL come-guaranteed- and you'll be taken seriously. We'll work WITH YOU. I gotta be honest,if we think you're OK with things we're not gonna risk our necks.Truth. We'll do what we can but we can't make a dent. We have to have your help, eyes and ears to make a difference. You know we're not perfect and so do we. We're overwhelmed and understaffed, but we do wor
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Examiner Reader said:
Nakia, Wake up! first of all little melvin is not to be looked at as some urban hero. He destroyed many lives,and left many a child parentless in his wake he was nothing but a two bit heroin dealer and that's it. as far as you using the rrespect and disrespect words, you might want to really read the meanings of those two words, and then look around in the black neighborhoods. Looks to me like those neighborhoods were disrespected
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Examiner Reader said:
I was born in and lived in Baltimore. Lived on Mantle Street in the Parkville section as I remember. We moved to New Hampshire many years ago and never looked back. I am so glad to be not living in Baltimore anymore. Don't miss it for a second.
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Examiner Reader said:
Remember all, this is baltimore, unlike any other city in america.......the city that breeds and bleeds.
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Message Board Warriors are Cowards said:
I just figured it out. I was about to list out things that truly concerned citizens can do like join residents in Park Heights to close liquor stores, be a mentor, advocate for youth funding on Tax Payers Night (3/4/08), meet w/gang members receptive to plans for peace,or volunteer at some local organizations that I'm connected to, but then it hit me. Most of the folks on this message board aren't here to be a part of the solution because they're afraid. Just admit it. You're scared to get out of your cars, sacrifice your time, and lock arms with other citizens - who may not look like you - to make our city better. It's much easier for you to be a coward. You log onto a computer, find a message board where you can remain anonymous, and try to prove to yourself that you're not scared by making "tough guy" comments that you wouldn't dare say to "those people" face to face. You've allowed the media & your prejudices to make you a prisoner of your own fear.YOU ARE A COWARD!
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NO excuses said:
Nothing like the blight we're seeing happens overnight. We may really be facing 2 generations of people in huge numbers who are addicted with addicted babies too,who are unemployed and unemployable,who were produced by parents,one of whom they've never met or who has been in prison prior to their birth,who have been the "adult" in the family as a young child to a crack add. parent and several siblings.Plenty of hopelessness here.Some cannot or will not be saved and we'll have to depend on their limited life spans or the violence of the streets to end their cycles.There numbers will grow unchecked unless we make some very difficult and unPC decisions to put an end to this. We cannot afford to tolerate unwed teenage births, addicts,drunks and criminals on our street corners either.The government can't and won't fix this.This is a social problem exploded into a political and economic problem.Let it grow and it will continue to take over. Support those who want to take their homes bac
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To 9:58- Prefers African Immigrants said:
Do the words "selective immigration profiles" ring a bell? Check out the Ethiopian immigrant profile in Ohio for 2007 and 08 and be careful what you wish for brother.
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Examiner Reader said:
Food for thought....Look @ East Baltimore, these neighborhoods were one thriving & when the projects were torn down these residents moved into the Eastside & destroyed this once wonderful area. you drive on your way to Hopkins & looks like a bomb hit this area.So here you had a great looking area & then overnite these same people destroyed it, so tell us who is to blame? Stop making excuses OK!
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Interesting Point 10:17 said:
I haven't seen much here today about blame and excuses. I certainly HAVE seen a few posters who have identified themselves as being black expressing the same disgust and frustration with the people and conditions that bother us all. They've made no excuses for those who absolve themselves of personal responsibility for their situation in life and who fail to care for and educate their children. You might read a little further and I think you'll find that there is a lot of interest in rebuilding these neighborhoods from the ground up by the people who live there.
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Examiner Reader said:
Blacks have now had 40 years to rebuild "their" neighborhoods after rioting and arson pushed the whites out in 1968. Are the neighborhoods of North and Greenmount, Gay Street and Pennsylvania Avenue in better condition today than they were in 1967? What is the excuse now. Who is to be blamed now? For 40 years blacks have had the opportunity to make their neighborhoods a better place to live but they have failed to do so. It is my fault and everyones fault, except their own --I am repeatedly told in the media. I for one refuse to give a pass to todays bad behavior by blacks because of black anger over events ranging from in time from 40 to 200 years ago. America has given blacks all it can to assist them up in society since 1964. How about a little gratitude from blacks for a change. Even today whites areas thrive in Baltimore while black area continue to crumble. 40 years ago black anger burned Baltimore, why hasnt black anger fueled "their" rebuilding of black neighborhoods?
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No JB you're the problem said:
All of us who meet in Park Heights at 3PM have jobs, but we take time out of our day to meet for about 60 minutes. It's called SACRIFICE and the people who really care about changing things in our community will do just that. You'd be suprised of the diversity of our group. We have PhD's, "no-D's", organizers, ministers, and others joined together for 1 cause. That pessimistic and negative spirit that you displayed is precisely a part of the problem.
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Examiner Reader said:
been there,blow it off the map.
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RE: Obvious....9:51 said:
Poverty and crime in inner city neighborhoods are not culture. They're to product of a complete lack of culture and certainly not multicultural in any way. This plague sucks the life out of the residents who live and try to work there and keeps any possibility of culture of any kind from growing. Different cultures do coexist and have for centuries, however uncomfortably, but poverty and crime are neighbors to no one and nobody needs them or wants them. Respect the needs of those residents who want these things driven out of their lives and their neighborhoods forever.
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Examiner Reader said:
To EXAMINER READER citing 8:09: A majority of Baltimore City blacks in statistical failure is not total failure. There are plenty of black people in Baltimore City and America that have concentrated on individual responsibility, thrived, and are not bigots themselves. I know lots of them. The problem starts with blacks thinking it takes courage and ingenuity to survive years of slavery, segregation, inferior educational opportunities. This is not true. It takes intelligence, useful skills, and an unwillingness to blame bigotry for your failures. Look at recent African immigrants in the U.S. They perform better than the rest of the U.S. population in education and employment. The winning characteristics of African immigrants in the U.S. Based on Census data from 2000, indicate they have higher educational qualifications than Americans, which results in higher per capita incomes. No slavery issues or Liberal feed bigotry ideas for these success stories.
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TO JB said:
I'm a business owner in the city, and apparently you're part of the clientele too. Now, how can you be so sure that the patron in front of you is a "neighborhood resident" anymore than they could figure out where you come from? Riff Raff to the left of me and Riff Raff to the right. My door is open to everyone and their money is as welcome as yours friend.
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Examiner Reader said:
OK, lets say there is no chance of neighborhood people ever taking personal responsibility for making improvements in their own neighborhoods. Hope this isn't true. I'm not saying save the world and feed the hungry. I'm saying start small, meet your neighbor, talk about the situation in your neighborhood and take it a step further together. Get a petition going to shut something dangerous down if you have to ,talk with the cops, pay attention and look out for each other's interests. Get off your rear ends and into your neighborhood streets and businesses. If you really want to trust this job to more years of government, state and local,oversight then you'd better be prepared to open your wallets and see the situation stay the same or worse. An April Fool and his money are soon parted. Trust yourself first!
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JB said:
7:10 AM. I would never invest in micro loans for the city. Whenever I am at a local store and see a neighborhood resident in front of me, they are usually complaining about the cost of a blunt and then counting out change to buy it. You can offer all of the funding you want to those businesses, but you have to consider the clientele.
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Examiner Reader said:
JB, Who cares?, its April fools DDay. D
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EXAMINER READER-TAKE IT BACK!! said:
If there is one clear thing in all of this, it's that we can't depend upon politicians and government programs to make our neighborhoods what we need them to be. They can't walk the streets with us, won't make sure that the trash, human and otherwise, is swept off the streets and that we and our kids and our elderly can feel safe again. They won't bring mom&pop businesses back, won't keep liquor stores and clubs from sprouting up like weeds or keep drug dealers and criminals from roaming the streets like packs of wild dogs. They'll give up some money and will stand in front of cameras for interviews, but the real work will have to be done through the grass root efforts of those people who live, work and have a stake in the neighborhood. They're taking back Park Heights-who wants to be next?!
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RE We're Closing Liquor Stores.... said:
More Evidence that it can and will be done. I'm up for the challenge and I bet you'll find a lot more are too. Good job 8:52. See you in the streets. To those who just want to complain...If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the problem.
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Grass Through the Cracks said:
There are no insignificant stories of success. Anyone who finds the courage to push through a difficult situation deserves to be applauded. Generalizations about any race are evidence of limited intellect...ok you can have this deleted but someone will read it you can count on it. Education, Perspiration, and Determination are tough to beat and have NO COLOR!
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We're closing liquor stores in Park Heights! said:
To all you "message board warriors" out there, I invite you to become personally responsible for your city by helping residents in Park Heights to shut down the liquor stores that have a direct relationship to the crime and violence in our community. We meet every Tuesday 3PM at the Park Heights barbershop (5114 Park Heights Ave. near Belvedere). Examiner won't let me leave a link, but just google "Park Heights, liquor stores". Our youtube vids and some other links will come up. Don't waste all your energy posting anonymous tough guy comments on the internet. Meet us in the streets to help us reclaim our community!
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RE Conscious Reader @8:22 said:
AMEN!!!! People have to take a stand and drive out the people and things in their neighborhood that prey on their children and destroy their surroundings. Your message is proof positive that it can and has been done by individuals who work together and with their representatives- but it is a work in progress, NEVER finished, and you'll always need to be watchful that the wolf doesn't creep back in again!
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To A History Observer @ 7:28 said:
I live around and work with folks like this every day and have for years. As a white guy just trying to make my way I just wanted to say I see these people you're talking about and I know they're out there too. Not everyone you meet is a crack addict or a criminal. Some are just honest working people like myself.
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Conscious Reader said:
Personal responsibility does count the most...Many of these people don't know how to access social means to end community problems. I have a liquor store on my corner of N. Fulton and Edmondson, have tried calling 311 to get them to make them take some of the tacky advertisements down (liquor and cigarettes) that our children are bombarded with every day.Nothing has happened.On a good note though, a neighbor started a petition to stop an after hour club from starting behind our block, our new council person stopped it. It takes individuals to unite in a community to police that community and make things happen. It also takes citizens to elect officials to serve them, and not because their pastor told them to vote for them, or because they recognize their name (there are no legacy politicians). Council members should work full time, and be held accountable.If individuals don't band together to force change, nothing will happen.Also, Democrats aren't always the best, the city is proof
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Grass Through The Cracks Comment said:
in so few words you said so much!....it's so easy to point out the roses that grew through the concrete as opposed to targeting the removal of the concrete itself. Let's keep celebrating the few who have made it because obviously the masses of Black folks are poor and misguided because they want to be.
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Examiner Reader said:
Life getting in the way does not explain a 66% dropout rate in the Baltimore City schools. What explains that statistic it is an ingrained black redneck culture fuled by the soft bigotry of Liberal politics.
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To 7:44 said:
A little TOO simple perhaps. This memo is generally true for any one of us of ANY race, but the fact is that sometimes life gets in the way no matter how hard you've worked and followed your recipe for a comfortable middle class life. Catastrophic illness, death of a parent, job loss, the birth of a child with special needs requiring very expensive care for life...all are unexpected hurdles that can cause us to be thrown off the path to success. We have to prepare as best we can for the unexpected, live within our means, be willing to lend a hand to our neighbor and willing to accept his or hers when we're in need and encourage our children to reach the highest level of education possible. We can begin by learning to differentiate a need from a want and count our blessings every day.
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Examiner Reader re history observer said:
God bless the grass that grows through the cracks.
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A history Observer said:
You know it takes no small amount of courage and ingenuity to survive years of slavery, segregation, inferior educational opportunities, infestation of a neighborhood by crime and drugs, dissolution of traditional family structure and the proliferation of single unwed births in the name of welfare and the "great society" all around them. In spite of all of this, THERE ARE STILL are those who make their way out of no way without an attitude of entitlement, the weight of racial hatred on their shoulders, or a defeatist mentality. Every day,ordinary people. They have risen above everything that life has thrown at them and the expectation that could not overcome....but they have and they do every day. These are the REAL leaders of the Black community though you might never have heard their names. They reach back and offer a hand to another who is determined to rise to the top and make a contribution to their families and our country. THEY MAKE ME SO PROUD TO BE AN AMERICAN.
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