Posted on 10/10/2005 7:32:44 PM PDT by Coleus
Ed Dept. eyes charge kids bullied, 1 beaten
|
|||
Students victims of race hate, mom sez
|
|||
|
|||
Mom Lisa Brown, 33, told the Daily News she relocated her family from their small Oklahoma town so her husband, a Brooklyn native and social worker, could more easily find work and her sons could experience different people and ways of life. Brown enrolled her sons, Sloan, 12, and J.T., 13, at Ebbets Field Middle School in Crown Heights. But when the boys, who are white, showed up, their mom said, they got a chilling indication of what was to come. "Oh my gosh, we are going to have fun this year," a security guard muttered, according to Brown. Things quickly got worse. Sloan was beaten mercilessly, called "cracker" and "white boy," and chased into traffic by his new classmates, his family said. The abuse got so bad that Sloan routinely bolted out of the building to find his brother and run to a nearby subway, dodging verbal and physical attacks, he said. "It almost makes me cry," Sloan said. "I'm scared to go back." The brothers skipped school all last week while their parents tried to sort out the mess. "Do I have to send the National Guard in to get my children an education?" asked the distraught mom. When Brown tried to alert Principal Marge Baker to the abuse, "the principal refused to take the calls," she charged. Brown filed several police reports at the 71st Precinct stationhouse about the alleged abuse, but said she was ignored. Police sources said precinct cops did take the incident seriously but believe school staff are in a better position to deal with what appeared to be a series of schoolyard fights and bullying. The boys' stepfather, Ken Brown, requested a transfer for the boys on Sept. 28, but Education Department officials noted he can't seek the change because he is not a custodial parent. Eventually, the fedup mom went to nearby Elijah Stroud Middle School to transfer her sons there, but said the principal told her: "They'll have the same problem here." Education officials promised to help the Browns - after being contacted by The News. "The principal was not sufficiently attentive to this situation," the Education Department said in a statement. "Upon learning of the situation, the region is taking immediate action to arrange a transfer for these children. "We will fully investigate what happened, including whether racist statements, which are not tolerated, were made and take appropriate action." Brown said the Education Department called her several times over the weekend, after The News made queries, pledging to get the kids into Elijah Stroud and chastising her for calling in the press. Despite the principal's warning, Lisa agreed to send her boys to Elijah Stroud tomorrow. "I'll make sure my kids are safe because it is the school system's job to make sure they are," she said. For Sloan and J.T., escaping Ebbets Field Middle School will be a relief. The school opened in September as one of the city's many new small schools, with plans to "become the crown jewel" of Crown Heights, according to the Education Department Web site. The Browns said their ethnically and racially diverse neighbors in Prospect Heights have embraced them, and they thought New York was "the greatest place on Earth" - until they started battling the school system. "I was excited to expose my children to a complete variety of people," Lisa Brown said. "I thought it would be an advantage. I always told my children that children could be cruel - but not to this extent." |
I was accepted to Stuy and would have been there between 1982-1986 if I wasn't accepted at Regis (private, Jesuit), where I graduated in 1986.
The few folks I knew at Stuy burned out. Go figure.
I like Regis, Stuy, and Bronx Sci a lot tho!
Same one you do.
New York isn't liberal. It's all about business. And the fact of the matter is, some liberal ideas just happen to coincide with the business environment in NYC. Liberal is the line they sell. The reality is hardcore business.
Brown vs the Board of Education, hasn't that been done?
My sister attended Sacred Heart 1988-1992 or so, I think. I think it was one of Regis's sister schools too. GREAT SCHOOL!
Funny, work-matters and experiencing different people and ways of life were the exact same reasons I LEFT NYC! Haha!
Get a good slang dictionary. Most of the terms will be in there. (Paper verison - I have found the online slang dictionaries to be somewhat inadequate).
Suggestion - have some fun with this. Get a small notebook, and when they use a term you don't know (or even one you do), stop them mid-sentence, whip out the notebook, smile, and sweetly ask them what it means so you can write it down.
I will take that back, though...as I said previously that the only people I ever knew who were (are) racist are my husband's family in Hartford, CT. Their eye-rolling always appalled me. But I didn't grow up with any sort of racism and I truly do nor have any friends who are. I have black friends, as well...mostly middle-to-upper middle class.
lol! I must admit there are some who look at me with total incredulity when I ask what something means. I guess I just tune most of it out. :)
I wonder if the mugging took.
Liberalism in New York is less about Seattle-style Kum-ba-ya and more about high taxes to support a bureaucracy that Otto Von Bismark would envy.
Bill O'Reilly once referred to Manhattan as the Balkans because everyone has a competing agenda. However, the strongest voices for the liberal agenda reside in NYC. Their views couldn't rule anywhere else in the country, so they gather together in NYC out of a certain herd instinct. NYC offers them safety in numbers.
15 yrs ago, I had to yank my kid out of 6th grade because he got ganged up on like this....ending up with a concussion and 4 broken ribs. His crime? Telling a black kid (8th grader) to quit hitting him with a notebook, while waiting in the busline at school.
My son was new at the school....small for his size and hadn't made any friends yet. The principal wouldn't do anything because he feared retribution from the parents of the 5 black kids who attacked my son. I pressed charges on all of them....dealt with harrassing phone calls, stalking, etc. I finally just took my son out of the school, sold our new house and moved to the country.
I didn't have that problem here, but in a small, rural community where everyone knows everybody.....things like this don't get swept under the rug for the sake of being PC. The kids made friends, both black and white....but the difference was and is...the attitude of ALL the parents.
"I homeschooled by youngest through 8th grade. When I wanted him to experience 'diversity' , I beat him up and took his money."
What a great post! Bravo! I was also in VN 68, 69, 70.
Best wishes to you.
So what's the verdict? Was it worth leaving NYC for Vegas?
I have lived and worked in Illinois for almost 40 years and have experienced voluntary segregation in the work place and in factory cafeterias and in society as a whole.
Last Feb. after going to Mardi Gras my wife and I stopped to eat at a resturant just north of New Orleans, while there a work crew of some sort came in, there were about 20 of them and obviously they were there to have breakfast before starting work. The crew was half white half black and I expected they would seat themselves along racial lines. What happened however was that they seated themselves at tables for four on an almost 50/50 split. They couldn't have been more racially integrated if they tried.
Their time there was full of laughing and talking and having a good time. It impressed me because in 40 years I had never seen anything like it in the north.
Yeah, i just meant that in what seems to be a majority of cases, the black kids seem to think it's ok to hate white kids, especially in the worse areas. Indianapolis Public Schools is one example (from my town). That system is dysfunctional, and whites get the worst of it.
Agreed!
Blessed Sacrament? The one near Lincoln Center? I went there for second and third grades. 1969-1971. From fourth through twelfth, I went to St. Hilda's & St. Hugh's, near Columbia U.
Nam Vet
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.