Posted on 12/21/2013 2:02:08 AM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
Ever since the knockout game exploded into the public consciousness last month, opinions have differed widely on what it is, when it started, or whether it even actually exists outside of a few high-profile incidents that have attracted national attention over the past two months.
But several interracial communities in Brooklyn, N.Y., are undeniably in the grips of a wave of brutal, fist-borne violence, and the trend has some observers recalling the dark days of the 1991 Crown Heights riots with a mix of fear, outrage and sadness.
Repeated attacks by black youths on Orthodox Jews in Brooklyn's key Jewish enclaves, including the Crown Heights and Midwood neighborhoods, have sparked widespread concern within the insular religious community. And other racial groups have recently begun to feel that same paranoia, as just last week a young, gay black man was savagely beaten by Orthodox Jews in South Williamsburg, and there have been recent reports of black-on-black assaults as well.
The NYPD, local politicians and Brooklyn residents have yet to come to a consensus on which of the attacks were related to the so-called knockout game or even how many such incidents have taken place. They also disagree about whether the majority of the attacks -- which typically involve youths sneaking up on people and punching them in the head to impress their friends and inflict pain without committing further crimes like robbery or sexual assault -- are motivated by hate, or if most of them are just random acts by bored kids looking for excitement.
One major reason why many leaders are wary of making too much of the assaults or prematurely lumping them together under a salacious, made-for-TV moniker is that they are deeply aware of the real possibility that a temporary concern could become a persistent scourge if it is not handled responsibly. City Councilman Jumaane Williams, who has made the reduction of violence in his Brooklyn district, particularly gun-related violence, a central issue of his public life, says that the assailants need to be held accountable for their actions but that it is vital that community leaders of all backgrounds have an ongoing dialogue about the best way to stop the attacks without inspiring copycats and increasing tensions. His comments are informed by a strong awareness that racial friction endures as a latent issue in America's inner cities, and that any heightened discord could reignite dormant animosities.
We need to step back so we can take control of the perception of it, take stock of what the perception is versus the reality. People are getting hurt, it's foolishness, and its got to stop, Williams told International Business Times. But I dont want to add things to it that fuel the fire If there is an assumption out there that these are [racially motivated attacks] we have to address that perception because perception becomes reality.
Still, theres definitely something going on in Brooklyn, and the knockout game phenomenon -- whatever it is -- has struck to the core of the boroughs tenuous harmony. It threatens to reopen old wounds and challenge the hard-earned gains made in the ongoing effort to unite the more than 2.5 million people of vastly diverse backgrounds whove made one 81.8-square-mile segment of Long Islands far western tip their home.
Brooklyns official motto translates from the Dutch to In unity there is strength, and that proud sense of togetherness is being challenged by an unrelenting barrage of unprovoked, impromptu assaults that has descended on communities across the nation.
Word on the street
Crown Heights is best known for the riots bearing its name that broke out in August 1991 after a car driven by an adherent of the black hat-wearing Chabad Lubavitch Hasidic sect of Orthodox Judaism got into an accident that left a 7-year-old Guyanese boy, Gavin Cato, dead on a Utica Avenue sidewalk where he had been fixing his bicycle. Onlookers virulently disputed the events precipitating and following his tragic death, and within hours, a group of about 20 black youths descended on 29-year-old Yankel Rosenbaum, a Jewish student visiting from Australia, in the street and beat and stabbed him to death. The neighborhood descended into chaos for the next three days in a violent racial conflict that took years for residents to put behind them.
Today Crown Heights is still populated by a diverse assemblage of Hasidic Jews, African-Americans and Caribbean-Americans, often starkly segregated block by block. But a recent influx of young white professionals and posh eateries, bars and art galleries is gentrifying the neighborhood and crowding out the mom-and-pop stores and bodegas that once lined thoroughfares like Franklin and Nostrand avenues.
Until the yuppies arrived, Crown Heights was long plagued by drug dealing, drive-by shootings and gang crime, but there were relatively few incidents of random violence against or within the Jewish community there. That sense of peace in the Hasidic community in Crown Heights has been shattered over the past several months as a series of attacks against local Jews has left local Hasids afraid to walk the streets of their own neighborhood for fear of being viciously assaulted. The NYPD failed to respond to requests for an official count of these so-called knockout game attacks, and a spokesperson for the department would only offer a platitude: Ill let you know that we investigate all claims of assaults. But a Brooklyn police source said that every few days I hear about a new attack. No real way to stop it.
As a Jewish Brooklynite who represents the heavily Orthodox districts of Borough Park and Midwood, City Councilman David G. Greenfield has his ear to the ground in those neighborhoods, and he confirmed what many of their residents, along with those of Crown Heights, have to say about the rising violence and its impacts on the community. Greenfield said that about a dozen knockout-style attacks against Jews have occurred in the three neighborhoods since the beginning of November, with three taking place in Midwood in the first 13 days of December alone.
Theres a lot of concern there because theres been a lot of documented knockout attacks over in those communities, all of which were against Orthodox Jews, he told IBTimes last week. Its a crime of irrational violence, and thats why its engendered such fear If youre not a very big guy like me, youre afraid of walking home, that at any point you could get knocked out.
The Brooklyn police source confirmed that reading of the mood in the boroughs Jewish communities, saying, I think it might be racially motivated because they keep going after Jews I think the Jews are worried about it to some extent. I do hear them talking about it a lot.
Greenfield qualified his comments by saying that weve come a long way since the Crown Heights [riot] days and the Jewish and black communities have made a lot of progress. However, he said, My own relatives tell me theyre afraid to walk outside.
Their fears appear to be warranted, as the attacks have targeted a wide swath of the Jewish population, from a 12-year-old Orthodox boy who was hit in the head while walking to Hebrew school in Crown Heights, to a 76-year-old Russian Jewish woman who was punched in the back of the head while walking to a Jewish community center in Southeast Brooklyns Canarsie neighborhood on Nov. 25.
To get an idea of how random many of the crimes appear to be, click "play" below to watch a video obtained by CrownHeights.info depicting Shmuel Perl, a 24-year-old Orthodox Jewish man, allegedly being nonchalantly punched in the face by Amrit Marajh, 28, moments after Perl says he overheard Marajh being dared by his friends to hit him.
A state of resigned fear seems to be fairly common among Jewish Crown Heights residents, like 20-year-old student Jesse, who declined to provide his last name.
Its scary to keep hearing about this. My friend went to see one of the guys who got knocked out and he was really bruised up, he told IBTimes. We are very concerned about it, for sure.
An evolving threat
For months, the perpetrators of the knockout-style attacks were mostly black youths targeting Jewish folks. But that has changed to some degree in recent weeks, as the participants races have become less predictable, raising fears among some observers that the phenomenon has morphed into something bigger than a one-sided street game, and perhaps even become a full-on race war, though most leaders and Brooklyn residents who spoke to IBTimes discount such concerns.
As home to 57,000 adherents of the anti-Zionist Satmar Hasidic sect of Orthodox Judaism (as of a 2004 New York Times report), South Williamsburg, Brooklyn, has long been a major Jewish outpost in New York. A morning stroll down the neighborhoods bustling Lee Avenue is like a trip back in time to the 1920s-era Lower East Side of Manhattan, with bearded men in traditional black fedoras and black suits settling into bagel shops and offices while their wives walk their children to school at Yeshiva Ahavas Yisroel.
But just a few steps north across the fittingly named Division Avenue from that cement-block school identifiable only by gold-painted Hebrew characters exists an entirely different archetype of the Brooklyn experience. Towering over this unofficial northern border of the South Williamsburg Jewish community is the Williams Plaza Houses, a city housing project populated largely by poor black and Hispanic residents located a block away from the elevated Marcy Avenue J/M/Z subway station.
The two unofficially segregated sections of the neighborhood dont often interact, according to Jay Sutherland, a black, 28-year-old resident of the northern portion of South Williamsburg.
Thats just how it is, how its been for a long time, he explained to IBTimes. The Orthodox Jews want to protect their community and thats them. Its nothing new.
That may be exactly what about a dozen ultra-Orthodox Jewish residents of the south side of South Williamsburg would say they were doing at about 4:30 a.m. on Dec. 1, when they allegedly assaulted gay, black Fort Greene, Brooklyn, resident Taj Patterson. The 22-year-old college student told police he was making his way home from partying in a section of Williambsurg north of Division when he was approached by the group, who allegedly cheered and called him a f----t as they beat him, leaving his right eye socket broken and cornea torn and cuts and bruises on his face and legs, according to the New York Daily News.
It was apparently the first time since the knockout game scare surfaced that a similar attack had been carried out by members of the Jewish community against a black man, and reactions were swift and opinionated. Many suggested that the assault on Patterson was an incident of racial vengeance, while some believe it may have been motivated by anti-gay sentiment.
But Yoel Weiss, a 25-year-old ultra-Orthodox Jew who works at Satmar Meat Market on Lee Avenue, told IBTimes that a friend who claims he was on the scene offered a different explanation for the attack, and that it had nothing to do with race, sexuality or religion. His friend alleges that Patterson was heavily intoxicated (a fact that has been reported by police) and was knocking mirrors off of parked cars (this part could not be independently verified) when he was approached by a member of the all-Jewish Shomrim neighborhood watch squad, who called the NYPD and attempted to hold Patterson until police officers arrived.
But the guy was so drunk he started to punch, so the Shomrim called [for] backup, Weiss alleged. Youngsters listening to the scanner hear theres action, so they came, everyone gathers round, they hear hes drunk and punching people, so they start to punch him back, and there was an overreaction to the whole misunderstanding and the whole situation got out of hand.
Whatever actually happened that cold morning, the role reversal from the typical knockout game script only fueled further furor over the trend, which continued less than 20 hours later when two "black or Hispanic" teens approached and knocked out 26-year-old Orthodox Jewish man Eli Leidner about half a mile from the scene of the attack on Patterson.
Knockout hysteria
While the knockout game has played out on the streets of Brooklyn, a separate war of words has taken place between community and religious leaders, politicians, pundits, the police and other observers. Beginning in mid-November, the conversation reached a fever pitch as attacks simultaneously spread across Brooklyn and the nation.
Reports of potential knockout game-related assaults that resulted in deaths in communities from Syracuse to St. Louis dating as far back as 2010 were re-reported by breathless commentators on network news programs as right-wing bloggers called the attacks the front line of a new race war and even Rev. Al Sharpton declared the trend and those who perpetrate it racist, deplorable, reprehensible and inexcusable.
The conversation over the knockout game within Brooklyn reached deep lows of its own, as some representatives of the impacted constituencies found themselves with their feet in their mouths over insensitive comments made at the height of the panic.
City Councilwoman-elect Laurie Cumbo placed partial blame for the attacks on the black communitys supposed feelings of resentment of Jewish landlords, the accomplishments of the Jewish community and Jewish success in a letter she later publicly apologized for writing.
Meanwhile, State Assemblyman Dov Hikind -- who unapologetically wore blackface to a Purim party in February and told Fox News this month that literally almost every single victim in New York has been Jewish and almost every single perpetrator has been black -- appeared unwilling to accept Pattersons allegations, calling them bizarre and so out of character for Orthodox Jews, yet he conceded that something clearly happened to him, the Daily News reported.
But now it seems that a sense of cool-headedness has set in for most of the people entrusted to respond responsibly to crises in their communities.
Many leaders and Brooklynites still refuse outright to even acknowledge the existence of a knockout game, hoping that -- as with a schoolyard bully -- refusing to give it legitimacy could reduce its impact. And politicians and religious leaders have hosted a number of rallies in recent weeks aimed at finding a way to bring an end to the practice, while New York state legislators have proposed legislation to increase penalties for people who are convicted of committing knockout game-style assaults.
Despite these productive steps, New York City saw another attack Sunday night, when Imran Ramin, a 24-year-old waiter, was allegedly punched in the face in Lower Manhattan by New Jersey resident Jason Wren, a stranger to Ramin. Wren was arrested and charged with misdemeanor assault and second-degree harassment in connection with the crime, according to the Daily News.
Though many folks remain fearful in light of the recent string of attacks, the sense of dread appears to be subsiding for some in the Orthodox Jewish community, including Shay Walter, a 25-year-old Satmar Hasidic Jew who works at Oneg Heimishe Bakery in South Williamsburg.
I dont believe in the knockouts, really. Theres something going on lately, but I dont know what it is, Walter said, adding, The media blows it up so people feel like they can do it more. But we have Shomrim [patrolmen] out at all hours of night, so whoever does it, theyll catch. Its only a matter of time.
Brooklyns changing face
Brooklyn has seen a stunning revitalization in recent years, as areas like Bushwick, Park Slope and Greenpoint have emerged as some of the trendiest and most expensive ZIP codes in the country.
The Nets moved from New Jersey into an impressive new stadium on Flatbush Avenue, bringing professional sports back to Kings County; and the boroughs name has become synonymous for many with hipster culture and the expensive tastes, elitist attitude and narcissism that define it.
The hit HBO series Girls has documented the gentrification that has in a single generation turned Brooklyn from a place most tourists were afraid to visit into perhaps the hottest attraction in Mayor Michael Bloombergs New York, cementing the transformation in the public imagination.
But Brooklyn is a massive place, home to nearly a million more people than Manhattan representing about 150 nationalities dispersed across dozens of neighborhoods, each with its own socioeconomic, cultural and racial demographics.
And while artists, trust-funders and stock traders frequent the tony stretches of North Williamsburgs Bedford and Metropolitan avenues, many of the issues that have long proven intractable for the less-fortunate segments of the Brooklyn population persist as they have for decades.
Gun violence and gang wars still terrorize the residents of many neighborhoods from Brownsville to Coney Island, where poverty and racial tensions continue to simmer under the radar despite the rejuvenation of many blocks within walking distance of their homes.
Still, Brooklyn as a whole has evolved in its communal mentality since the terror of the Crown Heights riots era, when communities seemed on the edge of burning as Orthodox Jews and blacks took to the streets to act upon their racially charged outrage.
Williams does not expect that level of disorder to recur this time around, as there is a much stronger bond between the boroughs diverse communities than there was during the administration of Mayor David Dinkins.
I am happy that, had this been a couple decades ago, we might have had bad reactions in both communities, the councilman said. So I think its a testament to a lot of the work in both communities that has been done, that rather than acting crazy and inciting more violence, people are coming together to denounce it and say its unacceptable.
It’s an outrage to call this a game.
Two words: concealed Carry. And since it’s illegal in New York - go fish.
What would happen if this were groups of white skin heads smashing old black people or other minorities?
It’s all just a fun game until some Trayvons get shot.
I thought that was a “win.”
If white people start knocking out black people what will the media call it?
Let's be honest, few whites want to be around black youths because of the latter's propensity for violence. Liberals enable this problem, and they have it in their power to halt it or drastically diminish it. They don't want to. By not clamping down on young, black males they're planting the seeds for a possible huge racial conflagration. Nasty white racists will be blamed, but the real criminals will be the black youths who are attacking innocent citizens AND!! the libs who enabled them.
A bunch of self-loathing, envious blacks who hate everyone who makes them feel inferior have chosen violence to express that hate. Call it racially motivated crime, or call it an expression of the race war, but put the participants out of their racial misery by killing them.
“Two words: concealed Carry.”
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Get real ! While I agree in a citizens right to bare arms, it is ludicrous to think that every citizen, especially senior citizens, will spend their lives packing heat every time they go out the door. If it could come to that, America would be lower then a third world country.
The cure is to execute the felons within 24 hours after a speedy trial.
We're talking NYC here, not Texas. There are few concealed carry citizens in NYC and they are the type who never go to these Brooklyn neighborhoods.
I’m a senior citizen, and I have a CHL. I carry every time I leave my home without exception. The only decisions I have are: 1) which pistol to carry, and 2) which holster configuration to wear. I also maintain proficiency by going to the range once per month, and sending at least 50 down-range. The biggest and most disturbing problem with people my age is that they still believe the LEO’s will protect them against these and other criminal events.
....when people start to protecting themselves, it will no longer be called a "game"
“Im a senior citizen, and I have a CHL. I carry every time I leave my home without exception.”
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While I respect your right to carry, I think it is ludicrous to see an America where everyone, especially senior citizens, having to pack heat every time they walk out the door.
Even in a third world country, I do not know anyone that thinks that way.
If one thinks that is America today, they need to get the hell out of dodge.
Bingo. The law abiding are disarmed, and people wonder how events like this could happen and attempt to sweep the phenomenon under the rug.
The fallacy in your argument is the straw man that anyone here is suggesting that EVERYONE, or at least every non-felon, needs to engage in concealed carry. No one has suggested that, and it is not necessary. You just need enough sheepdogs among the sheep to make thugs think they might end up like Trayvon.
For more on the general idea, go find the famous sheep / sheepdog essay on firearms carry.
Here, I did it for you, Alex
On Sheep, Wolves, and Sheepdogs
By LTC (RET) Dave Grossman, author of “On Killing.”
http://mwkworks.com/onsheepwolvesandsheepdogs.html
I do understand that there are very dangerous areas in America where it is prudent to carry protection. I never have, and would not choose to live in such areas.
When I moved out into the countryside of west Tennessee, an area of many Afros, a friend gave me a 380 to keep for protection. While I was not comfortable having it, I did keep it in a closet until I could give it back to him. I also had a 22 for shooting snakes or other wild vermin. That did come in handy on several occasions, but I have never been close to needing a weapon against another human.
If America reaches the point where no one feels safe unless packing heat, then it is time to find a new life elsewhere.
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