You see a cramped block.
I see a community.
You hear senseless rap, unnecessarily loud.
I hear self-expression.
You see a news story of a shooting.
I see a neighbor get shot.You see wasteful spending.
You see black skin.
I see diversity: dark-skinned, light-skinned, and chocolate.
You see a drug dealer.
I see a man who built a business.
You see drug money.
I see the only capital investment in this neighborhood for decades.
You hear shouting and wailing, a disruption.
I hear worship.
You see a future athlete.
I see a black youth who loves to read, write, paint, and make bracelets.
You see a lazy black woman.
I see a tired but strong mother (and grandmother) with a degree and debilitating chronic pain.You see another dangerous black man off the streets.
I see the latest victim of the prison industrial complex.
You see a culture of poverty.
I see an oppressive system.
I know what you see because I used to see the same things.
But I heard rumors of something different. So I moved to Southwest Philly.
Relationship--with a person, a place, an institution--changes things. It changed what I saw, heard, felt, thought. It confirmed the truth behind the rumors. There is something different.
But I heard rumors of something different. So I moved to Southwest Philly.
Relationship--with a person, a place, an institution--changes things. It changed what I saw, heard, felt, thought. It confirmed the truth behind the rumors. There is something different.
Photo credit to Walter Levi Wawra.
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