Sunday, October 23, 2016

Rehabilitation by Kai of Alameda / The Beat Within

Rehabilitation
by Kai of Alameda
The Beat Within

I feel like it's important for programs be made available in juvenile hall, because it's important for the detainees to know that they have other options.  It's important for us to know that we have a support system outside of our parents, because it makes us feel like we can be what people are not expecting us to be.  

We need to know that we can accomplish more than what's being presented ot us to be more than just another statistic We are important and that we can change.

We need to know that we can change.

We wish to see society, should not and will not be able to make us feel like we can't be up to the challenge, because we are all human and we all deserve a change to show people that we can change and we can be what we never thought we'd be and that's why, we need more programs.

-Kai, Alameda

Thursday, June 2, 2016

#TBW2016cj Summer 2 Fliers #VBWClassroom

All of the fliers, including alternate and original, to promote this summer's Creative Expressions of Masculinity In & Out of Juvenile Detention course have been included below. On Twitter check out the hashtag #TBW2016cj for links, resources, and updates related to the class. Also #TBWcj for all posts related to the courses history.  The white board below includes a listing of all courses that have been developed through the VBW Classroom concept.  All courses based on experience as a creative expression educator and volunteer over the past decade in El Paso, Texas and Las Cruces, NM.






Saturday, May 14, 2016

Writer's on the Inside & The Beat Within

As creative expression educators involved in creative justice, I think it's critical to find ways to archive the work that's been collected.  Especially as a point of access for the incarcerated creators themselves; if they're ever to have the chance to look themselves up or to find the platforms from which they contributed their earliest of thoughts and creative works.  I plan to utilize Google's Blogspot to archive voices from Voices Behind Walls, but also resources such as the article below that contribute to our understanding of creative expression and the importance of incarcerated voices.  Google Blogspot is the only online platform I know of that I'm hoping will hold on to these messages indefinitely on the world wide web.

I hope one day the world has access to the 20+ years of incarcerated writing that The Beat Within has accumulated.  That is a labor of justice that will need to be accessible for years to come.  Especially for understanding how a concept like Writers on the Inside and The Beat Within came to be during this age of mass incarceration.  Creative expression has a history, a very important one. 

A lot to understand from these voices, a lot to teach, a lot to learn. 

-Lee


Healing Words: 
Creative Writing Programs as Therapy for Kids in Detention
by James Swift

ANNISTON, Ala. -- Mercy Pilkington’s classroom, at first glance, seems like any other in the nation’s public school system. Novels penned by John Steinbeck and Harper Lee are stacked over a U-shaped row of cubicles. The walls are lined with laminated posters; crayon-colored cutouts of chubby red robins and lime-green pigs are pasted on the room’s sole window.

Pilkington, 39, has taught for 11 years. For the last six, she’s been an English instructor at Coosa Valley Youth Services (CVYS), a facility for juvenile offenders in this northeast Alabama city tucked in the foothills of the Appalachians. After years of distress from discarding her students’ writing after they left the facility, Pilkington decided to give her students -- both former and current -- the ability to share their writing with the world at large through a blog called “Writers on the Inside.”

The blog gives students access to their essays, poetry and stories long after they leave CVYS, Pilkington said. “When you’re not here, you can call up this website and there’s the story that you wrote,” she tells her students.

On this day, Pilkington’s classroom is primarily an audience of young boys, all clad in neon-orange jumpers, a reminder that this is no ordinary school. She carries a chemical restraint canister at her hip, and a personal alarm is tethered to her keychain. Still, through six years at CVYS, she said she’s never had to use the chemical restraint, and used the alarm only once -- when one of her students experienced a seizure in class.

Although Pilkington has worked with several young people that came from “good homes,” the majority of her students have extensive histories of abuse and neglect, she said.

“If you live in a home where your stepfather rapes you,” she said, “or you live in a house where you come home everyday wondering if your mom is there -- let alone if she’s sober -- it’s not going to turn out well.”

She added: “People need to understand society created these kids. We turn them into the things they end up being.”

There Are A Lot of Us Interested In What They Have To Say


Pilkington’s program is not the only one of its kind in the United States. Many programs incorporating elements of creative writing have been set up across the nation’s juvenile halls and treatment facilities, with the National Endowment for the Arts recognizing creative writing workshops like Massachusetts’ Actors’ Shakespeare Project and the Los Angeles-based InsideOUT Writers. Proponents of such programs believe not only can creative writing play a huge role in the rehabilitation of young offenders; they additionally serve as opportunities to instill both a sense of empowerment and consistency to a juvenile population frequently considered downtrodden and unstable.

David Inocencio, co-founder and director of The Beat Within, a San Francisco-based magazine that features essays and stories written by juvenile detainees, says creative writing can definitely be a therapeutic process for young people in the nation’s juvenile justice system.

“You’re going to get a young person that’s carrying a lot of baggage to put the baggage in thoughts on paper,” he said. “They’re going to get this amazingly thoughtful writing that speaks to a young person wanting to see a better life for him or herself.”

Inocencio started publishing the magazine in 1996. For the last 17 years, he’s held writing workshops inside juvenile halls across California. Currently, The Beat Within personnel serve more than 5,000 young people in California, and conduct multiple workshops across the nation, including programs in Arizona, Texas and Washington, D.C.

Making writing a habit for young people, Inocencio stated, is a tremendous platform for young people to express themselves and air their concerns about the environments they inhabit.

“We encourage the young people to keep on writing no matter where they go,” he said. “Whether it’s penitentiary, rehab, a group home or back into their communities -- that they keep writing to tell their story.”

Inocencio said writing programs like The Beat Within allow a population without a voice to speak up. The effects, he believes, also prove positive for adults within the juvenile justice field, as it gives attorneys, service workers and judges greater insight into the lives of young offenders.

“We’re able to get a window in the world of this young person,” he said. “In the end, when you read the publication, reading what these young people have to say through the workshops, you’re seeing what’s broken.”

He also believes writing workshops allow young people to develop trust for adults. “There are a lot of us interested in what they have to say,” he said.

The benefits of implementing creative writing programs in juvenile detention facilities are apparent, Inocencio said. “Seeing your writing, knowing that it’s going nationwide and read by folks in Washington, D.C., Alabama, Hawaii -- it empowers a young person.”

Creative writing not only changes a young person’s conceptualization of self, but also alters his or her life goals, Inocencio believes.

“It also helps the young writer realize that there’s more to his or her life than what got him or her in the system in the first place,” he said. “I don’t have to stay in the path of destruction [and I] do have the tools to get a high school diploma, or go on to higher education. Or that I am bigger than the label that has been placed on me.”

I’ve Had Some Really Surprising Stories

Pilkington says many of her students ask her if their blog entries have received any additional comments from website visitors. “They’re just blown away that people want to read it,” she said.

The Writers on the Inside entries consist primarily of in-class assignments, which, once redacted, are uploaded to the blog. “The students can’t use people’s names or their hometown,” she said. Additional safeguards ensure blog visitors cannot contact students, and students are not allowed to respond to comments posted on their entries. One of Pilkington’s greatest concerns is that individuals involved in some of her students’ charges may leave hateful or intimidating messages on the blog. She remedies this by setting the blog so all comments have to be pre-approved by her before being visible to visitors to the site.

“Almost everything that’s been put up there has been free writing,” she notes. “If you’ve got something in mind you want to write,” she frequently tells her students, “you’re more than welcome to.”

She said many times, her students just want someone to know what’s happened to them -- to have someone believe their accounts.

“It’s like they have this urge to get out and say, ‘Hey, this is what happened to me,’” she said. “I’ve had some really surprising stories.”

In one essay, titled “This is My Life,” one of Pilkington’s students reflects upon a long history of abuse suffered at the hands of her parents.

“When I hear somebody talking about how bad their life is just because they have a ‘fight’ with their parents, I get really mad.

“My real dad tried to kill me and now I’ll always have that big ugly scar on my stomach to remember it by. By the time I was seven my mom was a stripper/prostitute; she would do anything in order to get money for her drug addiction. Even if that meant selling her own daughter to grown men for support of it.”

Another essayist writes:

 “I have had a terrible life. My biological dad was in jail when my biological mother died, but he had two choices. 1. Find somebody to take care of me or 2. Put me in Foster Care.

“He decided to pick neither. Instead he tried to sell me and my other brother. My brother had some mental issues. He tried to kill me twice. Each time he had tried to drown me.”

Pilkington said although many of her students write about their own experiences, an equal number would prefer writing about more fantastical subjects. “I’ve gotten just as many that will not write about their personal life,” she said. “They want to write fiction short-stories.”

One of her students wrote of a fictitious inmate receiving a lethal injection, while others wrote about high school baseball stardom, earning their driver’s licenses and going fishing with explosives. The theme of guilt and punishment is common, even when the young writers dwell upon made-up worlds.

“As he left the scene of the crime, Victor was bawling,” begins one short story, titled “The Cry of Goodbye,” by a resident named J.F.

“He couldn’t believe his father had murdered that young boy.

“Victor had paid for the fine and the cars, but he new he could never pay for the little boy’s life. Victor had went to the little boy’s house so he could apologize to the little boy’s parents. The little boy’s parents were very happy that he had apologized.”

If You Like To Write, Or You’ve Got Something To Say, You Do It

Pilkington said she was initially surprised the CVYS administration wanted to start the program -- an idea she said was green-lit following an informal parking lot conversation.

“There are great facilities out there; there are some horrible facilities out there,“ she said. “And this happens to be one of the good ones that really cares a lot about what happens to kids.”

Pilkington said, gauging from their reactions to comments posted on her blog, her students believe they have something “worth saying” and something “that people want to know about.” During classes, she said she’s shown her students how to set up a blog, and demonstrated how she can update the site through smart phones and other mobile devices.

“If you like to write, or you’ve got something to say, you do it,” she said. “You don’t worry about what other people think about it or if just two people read it today. It’s your site.”

At the facility, Pilkington said some of her students have to write their essays using felt tip markers.

“I’m a writer myself, and I can’t imagine having to write my story on notebook paper with a magic marker,” she said.

Her students’ desire to write, even when having to resort to unconventional implements, demonstrates an emotional need to get their stories out, she believes. In some instances, Pilkington said, her students’ work is barely legible.

“We go through every single word and fix it to make it readable,” she said. “We sit there, and word for word, put a comma here, capitalize this.”

Pilkington said her intent with the blog is multifaceted, but at the end of the day, she just wants visitors to realize many of her pupils have a knack for the written word.

“I want people to read it,” she said, “and go, ‘Wow, the 15-year-old burglary suspect actually can write a decent story.’”



Swift, James. "Healing Words: Creative Writing Programs as Therapy for Kids in Detention." Weblog post. Juvenile Justice Information Exchange. JJIE, 29 Nov. 2012. Web. <http://jjie.org/healing-words-creative-writing-programs-as-therapy-for-kids-detention/99293/>.

Wednesday, March 9, 2016

Thoughts on The Central Park Five Documentary


The Central Park Five

Over the years, in all my education and reading there wasn't a single moment that called my attention to the The Central Park Five.  During the Spring semester of 2014, I taught a class that focused on Michelle Alexander's The New Jim Crow, Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness.  This included a digital screening of the Scottsboro Nine documentary, An American Tragedy.  During the same semester I also became aware of the Kids for Cash scheme in Pennsylvania and other issues highlighted in our research of the criminal justice system, specifically about juvenile justice.  I mention this because of the historic connection to injustice that we need to understand between The Central Park Five and the Scottsboro Nine.  As Dr. Cornel West would describe... this is Jim Crow, Jr. carrying on the work of Jim Crow, Sr.

My memory doesn't serve me well when I try to remember "when" I first heard about The Central Park Five.  At the time the media ran with the story, I was no more than 9 years old and for years the only thing I can remember about The Central Park Five growing up in the Southwest was that something bad happened in a big park... even when I visited New York in 2008, going past the park conjured up a negative feeling and stigma.  I didn't care to see anything beyond what I saw from the cab window.

Fast forward years later, browsing through Netflix I stumbled across a dark documentary cover with the words "The Central Park Five" in bold gray.  At first glance I didn't notice the details of the city of New York on one of the beams of justice with the caricatures of five central figures on the other. I didn't notice the fine print that this was a Ken Burns documentary.  As a matter of fact I didn't figure out that Ken Burns was involved until the credits at the end.  I'm a big fan of Burns work on Jazz and of course the Jack Johnson story, Unforgivable Blackness.  As I'm learning more about the film, I'm also in awe of the story behind the making of it through Ken's daughter Sarah Burns, who's work as a student brought life to its production.

Over the past couple of years, I've also listened to The Combat Jack Show.  It's a podcast archived on Soundcloud hosted by a former lawyer and Hip Hop Alumni.  On several occasions listening to the podcast I recall Combat and hosts talking about a "classic" interview with one of the members of The Central Park Five.  As Combat's program has a strong focus on the Hip Hop world, that is what triggered me to stop what I was doing and finally watch the documentary when I scrolled passed it on Netflix.  I didn't hear the interview yet but just hearing Combat mention "The Central Park Five" made me tell myself... "man, let me watch this film and see what it's all about already..."

The Central Park Five, like the Scottsboro Nine are stories we need to hold on to and pass on.  This story has everything to do with our responsibilities as students and teachers.  The lessons here go beyond the goal for closure with a relentless adversary like the city of New York.  After watching the film I've explored the net and YouTube for interviews and discussions centered around the film.  Since watching the The Central Park Five documentary I also found The Combat Jack Show with Raymond Santana and listened to it.  I'm grateful to say that this story is no longer a mystery to me.  And as I watched a YouTube video of the group discuss the film at the Harvard Law School a few years ago, I couldn't help but think about Kalief Browder who was still in Rikers at the time of the Harvard screening.

There's a lot to be said, but even more so to look forward to as we work our way through the collateral impact of The Central Park Five.  Especially as a source of inspiration and creativity to how we interact with these issues, how we learn, how we teach, how we share, and how we choose to get involved.

To learn more I highly recommend Twitter for its mobile access... There are several hashtags that will connect you to people's responses and thoughts about the film including the hashtag #TheCentralPark5.  On Twitter you can also link with the filmmakers and members of The Central Park Five, including Raymond Santana and Yusef Abdus Salaam.  

Peace.

Saturday, February 27, 2016

#TBW2015cj The Super-Predator Myth Timeline



The Super-Predator Myth Timeline click here

A timeline of student research for The Beat Within, A Compositional History of Incarcerated Writing course.   During the Fall semester of 2015, students read Nell Bernstein's Burning Down the House, The End of Juvenile Prison.  For the discussion of Chapter 5 titled 'The Rise of the Super-Predator And the Decline of the Rehabilitative Ideal' students identified news media/multimedia connected to the Super-Predator Myth.  In the course text, Bernstein states, "...high-profile researchers crossed crime stats with demographic projections to stir up fears of a coming wave of "super-predators" unlike any seen before - "more savage than salvageable," according to Princeton political science professor John Dilulio, who made his name by playing up the (supposedly) coming menace.  On October 9, 1996, a book called Body Count - co-authored by Dilulio, drug czar William J. Bennett, and think-tank director John P. Walters - hit the shelves, and America was formally introduced to our new worst nightmare: our children." (p. 72)

This timeline will document any Super-Predator Myth resources we discover off and online including links to news, video, audio, etc.  We will maintain updates to the hstry tool on Twitter.com/vbehindw hashtag #TBW2015cj.


Keywords + Tag = The Beat Within | #TBW2015cj | Burning Down the House | The End of Juvenile Prison | Nell Bernstein | superpredator | super-predator | super predator | predator | rehabilitation | juvenile justice | juvenile injustice | John Dilulio | William J. Benett | John P. Wlaters | Body Count | Ice-T | New Mexico State University | hstry | timeline | youth 

#TBW2014cj | Why Hillary Clinton Doesn't Deserve the Black Vote


Why Hillary Clinton Doesn’t Deserve the Black Vote
by Michelle Alexander, author of The New Jim Crow
The Nation: click here

From the crime bill to welfare reform,
policies Bill Clinton enacted,
and Hillary Clinton supported,
decimated black America.

For students that took part in the The Beat Within 2014 course that focused on The New Jim Crow, Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness.  Read February's Nation article by Michelle Alexander, author of The New Jim Crow click here.


Keywords + Tag = Michelle Alexander | politics | Hillary Clinton | Bill Clinton | juvenile | Black America | Black Lives Matter | mass incarceration | The Beat Within | #TBW2014cj | Jim Crow | The New Jim Crow | Jim Crow, Jr. | democrat | republican | vote | voting | voting bloc | super predator | super predator myth | superpredator | super-predator | voters | campaign | injustice | justice | deception | globalization | deindustrialization | segregation | Ricky Ray Rector | human rights | 1994 crime bill | Aid to Families with Dependent Children | poverty | Bernie Sanders | W.E.B. Du Bois | game over

Thursday, January 7, 2016

Dear The Beat Within

A powerful piece posted January 2016 on The Beat Within Facebook page facebook.com/thebeatwithin.  Visit and 'like' the page.  An inspiring message by Ruth to kick off the 20th year of The Beat Within's existence.  Since 1996. 


Dear The Beat Within

Thanks for waking up every Tuesday morning and taking your time to come to Eastlake (Central Juvenile Hall). You give us girls a different task to write about each week, we get to choose between the four topics.

It is actually a good experience for me. Every time I write it helps me let out my feelings or what is on my mind. I know I am not the only girl here to thank you guys for this.

As I see everybody write and everybody going up to read their paper (to the group), it helps me know I am not the only one with a difficult life or problems. I definitely recommend that other youth out there try this because it is not only here in Eastlake.

There are still girls out there who I am pretty sure have not picked up a pencil and wrote it all out on paper. Not just us girls, but guys too.

Once again thanks for everything you guys do. I hope you really take my advice about youth out there, remember they might need you. With much thankfulness...

-Ruth, Los Angeles


thebeatwithin.org

Tuesday, January 5, 2016

Creative Justice Reading #TBW2016cj

Creative Justice Reading #TBW2016cj


#Reading Hidden Truth
Young Men Navigating Lives In and Out of Juvenile Prison
by Adam D. Reich
University of California Press

T.abloid R.ealism E.nlightening W.orldz T.roubled H.umanity