Posted by Ngo jobs
on Thursday 8 November 2012
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Tony Harris takes a personal look at Baltimore's inner city and an education system failing black Americans.
Al Jazeera Correspondent
Educating Black Boys
Tony Harris takes a personal look at Baltimore's inner city and an education system failing black Americans.
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Baltimore, Maryland has come to be known as 'Charm
City' because of its harbour, which attracts a vibrant nightlife and
thriving tourism business.
But just beyond the harbour's calm waters is one of the toughest and most violent inner cities in the US.
Baltimore is also home to Al Jazeera presenter Tony Harris and in this episode of Al Jazeera Correspondent
he takes us on an up close and personal journey to his old
neighbourhood to witness the challenges facing black youth today as they
struggle to get out of the dead end of life on inner city streets.
Most of the crime in Baltimore is committed by black males with other
blacks as victims, making black males an easy target for the police.
And
many believe that the stereotyping of black kids starts at an early age
in the US - as early as grade school. In this film, Harris examines how
the education system has failed black boys and reflects upon why he
managed to make it out successfully while so many of his friends did
not.
A visit to his former high school reveals the desperation felt by both the pupils and the teachers.
"School
and criminal justice systems biased against black boys; all echoes of
my childhood. But I managed to avoid the trap of Baltimore's cycle of
poverty and violence," he explains. "But now I was going back to my
hometown to get to the bottom of what I considered the new civil rights
fight in America - educating black boys."