Posted on 10/10/2005 7:32:44 PM PDT by Coleus
Ed Dept. eyes charge kids bullied, 1 beaten
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Students victims of race hate, mom sez
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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." |
YES
I can't help thinking how odd this must sound to someone outside NYC.
Where you need only worry about getting blown up by a skinny white guy with a backpack and a jihadi beard.
I'll bet she believes that the people murdering our young soldiers in Iraq are "freedom fighters", too.
(Like I should talk, being that I live as a transplanted New Yorker in a yuppie nabe in Seattle). ;-)
Walk into any cafeteria in any "diverse" school and tell me what you see.
Yes.
In the real world black kids are vicious towards white kids.
That's one hell of a blanket statement. My son went to a racially mixed school and had more black friends than white. As a young adult (20) he still has many black friends.
Connecticut (or at least Fairfield County) is like a checkerboard. The safe suburbs alternate with the devastated inner cities. Frankly we were happy to move out of the state even though we lived in a decent town. But Hartford, Bridgeport, and the other inner cities are mostly disaster areas. People who work in Hartford now mostly commute from the suburbs if they can afford to.
Walk into any cafeteria in any "diverse" school and tell me what you see
Depends on the school.
Consider yourself lucky to live in racial utopia. In New York, Chicago, Philly, North Jersey, etc. what TWM said is true.
In New York, Chicago, Philly, North Jersey, etc. what TWM said is true.
I live in Philly.
It's not true everywhere, but the bigger the city and the more black children who are raised in disfunctional inner city welfare homes where family, jobs, school, and hard work are ridiculed rather than embraced, it is. Sadly, most inner city black kids will never be able to break the chains that their families, "friends" and cultures have bound them with.
Yep so much for "diversity"
The sent National Guard troops into schools in the South for the very same thing.
I would like to know why this isn't being done in a Yankee state.
Oh.. that's right. Yankee's can't be racists, only Southernors can.
Isn't Oklahoma represented by several different indian tribes, hispanics, japanese/vietnamese (from the 80's) and of course the blacks who left the south?
Sounds more like her husband pressured them in to it. Nice to be back home ain't it?
I have a friend, or rather an acquaintance, who is one of the people in New York who puts up big money to educate talented kids. So I'm somewhat familiar with what you say. And I'm familiar with the elite public schools. But you can be very, very bright and still not get in if you aren't also lucky.
Correct. The school I attended had a veritable rainbow of colors, and there were no problems at all. Of course, it was a private Episcopalian school, and half the teachers were nuns.
Inmates running the asylum. And being attended by future inmates also.
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