Reparations for the Descendants of American Slaves: A Practical Answer to the Race Crisis in America.

1g Slave Auction. New York Illustrated News; January 26, 1861, p. 177.

There is a cancer fast metastasizing in this country.  It’s been growing for a very long time and if something isn’t done about it soon, it’s going to kill us. I’m going to give you what I consider to be the start of a practical answer.  But first some general thoughts”:

I believe there is a need for people to begin thinking “Christianly” about the crisis issues of our day.  And to think Christianly means refusing to march lockstep with the attitudes and agendas of either the left or the right.  But, exactly how do we think Christianly?   Perhaps it begins with some basic concepts:  First, we must believe in the existence of a God of wisdom and love who has made His ways known and is willing to guide us both individually and collectively if we desire it.  Second, we must believe that this God has spoken in the Bible about the crisis issues that we face.  Third, we must commit ourselves to searching out that truth with the expectation that it will lead us to startling answers.  Fourth, we must be prepared for those answers to focus on the welfare of others especially on justice and compassion for the poor.  Most of all, to think Christianly means thinking in an on-going conversation with God.  We call that conversation prayer.

Let’s struggle to think Christianly about a conflict plaguing our country right now.  We might call it “The War Between the Races” and every year it grows worse.  I think most of us would agree that if something isn’t done to change the climate of antipathy that exists between so many black and white Americans our future is very bleak.

The discussion of reparations for the descendants of black American slaves broke into the media a number of years ago while lawsuits were moving through the courts of Europe demanding that reparations be paid by German companies who had benefited from slave labor during the Nazi era.  A number of voices within the African-American community began calling for the same kind of compensation to be made here.  As the years have passed media commentators, both conservative and liberal, have weighed in on the issue offering a series of arguments mostly against the idea.

From the conservatives:

  1. Reparations are not a viable issue because too much time has passed.  There is no connection between the victims of the “crime” and the people who would be receiving “compensation.”  Since there is no emotional connection there can be no “closure.”  Payment of reparations would only increase racial tension.  It wouldn’t change black attitudes and whites would resent it.
  2. Hundreds of thousands of white men died freeing the slaves during the Civil War.  That was payment in blood and it’s enough.
  3. It’s been 150 years since the slaves were freed.  In all that time their children have enjoyed the benefits of living in America.  Yes, there have been problems, but we’ve been working on them.  But along with the problems have come great opportunities.  Never before have black Americans lived so well or found so much success as today.  They should be thankful for what they’ve got and leave well enough alone.
  4. Blacks should be glad their ancestors were brought here as slaves.  It meant they could live here instead of Africa.  We sure don’t see any of them moving back to their “fatherland.”  If they’re so miserable give them one-way tickets to Nigeria.
  5. What about all the billions we’ve spent on welfare?  What about Affirmative Action?  Those and many other expensive government programs were designed to help black people.  How much more of our money do they want?  When are their demands going to end? Why don’t they stop complaining and invest their energies in getting off the government dole?
  6. It’s okay to go after specific companies that profited from slavery, but don’t even think about making individual taxpayers shell out for reparations.  That would penalize innocent people.  None of us living today had anything to do with slavery so we shouldn’t have to pay for it

And from the progressives:

  1. Reparations might be due, but who’s going to pay them?  Not the families of the former slave owners.  Their wealth was lost after the Civil War.  And there are only a few big companies left who benefited from slavery.  Even if you sold them off there wouldn’t be enough money to give each descendant more than a few dollars.  Sadly, it just isn’t practical.
  2. If the federal government tried to pay “reasonable” reparations we’d go trillions of dollars in debt.  It might be the moral thing to do, but the Bush Administration broke our economy with tax cuts for the wealthy and a selfish needless war so it isn’t possible.
  3. Okay, reparations are in order.  Let’s get the companies that benefited from slavery to make large donations to black causes such as scholarship funds, etc.  It’s not all that’s owed, but at least it’s something.  Since it’s the best we can do our African-American brothers and sisters will have to be satisfied with it.  And we’ll keep fighting for them against a Republican congress and President who care only about the wealthy and big business.

After hearing these arguments, as a Christian I was disturbed and unsatisfied.  Something was missing.  Perhaps because I am the descendant of slave owners I found myself drawn to the issue.  Was there a way to understand and apply the truth of the Bible in searching for a resolution?

The first step was to define terms.  What are reparations?  To make reparation is the act of making amends offering expiation or giving satisfaction for a wrong or injury.  Often it includes the payment of damages.  The Bible talks a lot about paying back what we owe.  In the Old Testament the Mosaic Law incorporates an elaborate system for making restitution.  As far as possible the payback should be equivalent to the loss.  In some cases the penalty to be paid to the injured party was four, five, or even seven times the loss.  (Exodus 21:18-36; Lev. 24:18-21; Deut. 19:21; Prov. 6:31)  In the New Testament when Zacchaeus the thieving tax collector met Jesus he promised to pay back fourfold for any wrongs that he had done.  (Luke 19:8)  According to Matthew 5:23-24 restitution is a Christian obligation and it is vital if an individual wants a right relationship with God.  Does this mean that restitution is only for Jews and Christians?  Hardly.  It is found in the most ancient non-Judeo/Christian legal codes.  Clearly, the principle of restitution is at the heart of maintaining a peaceful and productive society.

In the case of the Nazis, large companies in collusion with the German government stole from their slaves and did great damage to their families.  In our country both large companies and individual slave owners in collusion with our government stole from slaves and did great damage to their families.  As a Christian if I am in favor of reparations for the children of Nazi slaves (and I am) how can I think otherwise about the children of American slaves?  Is there a difference?  I can’t see one.  The only differences that I can find are both contrived and ugly:  1) The slave owners in Germany were hated enemies who still loom large in our collective memory, while the slave owners of the U.S. are long forgotten.  2) For the most part the Nazi slaves had white skins while the slaves of my ancestors didn’t.  3) To pay reparations to the children of American slaves might cost me something, while paying reparations to the children of Nazi slaves will cost the Germans.  These rationalizations make no sense.

In my opinion, there is no substantive difference between the cases.  To believe that one action represents justice demands that we believe the same regarding the other.  Now this is an uncomfortable position to take.  It implies a very serious national guilt that I find repugnant.  Guilt is not fashionable these days.  But if it forces us to deal with the truth we need to face it.

All right, let’s say that both logic and biblical morality lead us to one conclusion: Reparations for the children of black slaves represents justice.  What about the arguments against it from progressives and conservatives?

First, there is the argument about the lapse of time.  We are told that too much time has passed for payment of reparations to be a viable issue.  There’s no connection between the victims of the crime and those receiving compensation.  Time does play an important part in our legal system.  In many criminal and civil cases if you wait too long to apply for judicial relief you lose your right to do so.  But with a great societal evil such as slavery the passage of time means nothing.  To say that we shouldn’t repair the damage caused by such an evil because too much time has passed is like saying that we shouldn’t heal a disease because we’ve had it too long.  The racial hate spawned by centuries of slavery is a disease that is killing us.  We should do whatever we can to heal it.  But would the payment of reparations bring healing?  Many would say no because so much time has passed that there’s no connection between the crime and the payment.  African-Americans of today have no memory of slavery.  It would be like handing them money for no reason.  But, is this true?  Have they forgotten because so much time has passed?

Let’s try a little exercise.  Let’s remove slavery and race from the equation and personalize the issue.  Imagine that 100 years ago my great-grandfather stole ten thousand dollars from your great-grandfather and never returned it.  My ancestors used that money to establish our family in comfort.  Down through the generations our wealth has grown while your family never recovered and now lives in poverty.  How would your family feel toward mine?  Wouldn’t the memory and anger over the crime grow larger with each generation as your family compared your plight to ours?  Would you think that my family didn’t owe you anything just because 100 years had passed?  Wouldn’t any reasonable outsider say that my family should return the stolen money to yours with interest?  In particular, if we claimed to be Christians would that not be the Christian thing to do?

What about the argument that de facto reparations have been paid already in the billions that have been spent on welfare and countless other programs targeted largely toward the descendants of former slaves?  Isn’t that a form of reparations?  Once again, let’s take race and slavery out of the equation.  So my wealthy family finally agrees that we owe your poor family something because of what my great-grandfather stole.  However since you’re poor and uneducated we consider you to be stupid.  Certainly we can’t trust you with any significant wealth.  Your family would just squander it.  So we will give you back some of the money (as much as we deem appropriate), but we’ll do it our way.  We’ll dole it out in tiny parcels with all sorts of strings attached, supposedly to be certain that you use it properly.  In reality our system will assure that your family never gets out of poverty.  Even worse not only will your family remain poor, it will be dependent on us the family of the crook who stole it from you in the first place.  Is that repaying what we owe?

Now let’s examine the argument that the children of slaves should be thankful their ancestors were brought to America.  Living here is reparation enough.  Let’s imagine that in spite of the terrible thing my great-grandfather did to yours some in your family have done quite well for themselves.  When you confront us demanding that we return what was stolen we point to those of you who have succeeded.  With smug self-satisfaction we inform you as to why your relatives succeeded.  Because they didn’t want to remain poor they worked harder and overcame their circumstances.  Shouldn’t the successful members of your family thank us for establishing the conditions that helped them achieve their success?  Rather than asking for the stolen money to be returned you should be grateful we stole it in the first place.  In fact rather than coming to us for restitution, go to your own rich relatives if you need help.

Finally, on the conservative side there is the argument that all the blood that was shed and the lives lost freeing the slaves during the Civil War are reparations enough.  Let’s add an element to our analogy.  Not only did my great-grandfather steal from yours, he kidnapped him as well.  The police came out in force.  In the raid that freed him many policemen died.  Clearly they were heroic and your family is very grateful, but does that mean the stolen money shouldn’t be returned?

I confess that the liberal arguments against reparations frustrate me even more than those of the conservatives.  First because so much money has been thrown down the rat hole of incompetent bureaucratic social programs many of which have done great damage to the African-American community.  After wasting all that money it sounds like gratuitous blather to say that we can’t afford to pay reparations.  Unfortunately the sad truth is that they’re right we can’t.  Someone has estimated that to pay reasonable reparations for the theft perpetrated on generation after generation of black slaves would mean paying every descendant $500,000.  If I recall correctly, that added up to a figure of around 13 trillion dollars.   The liberal alternative of getting a few companies to pay for a few scholarships, etc., is laughably inadequate.

So what should be done?

And something really does need to be done.  The truth is painfully clear.  As a nation we stole vast amounts of money in the form of labor from black slaves.  And it wasn’t just the southern slave owners and a few corporations who benefited.  The whole country grew rich from the products and services of the slave system.  Whether we like it or not the benefits accrued to people whose ancestors were never slave owners and who came to America long after the Civil War was over.

Sadly our theft from the black community didn’t stop with the end of slavery.  When the slaves were “freed” most went from one form of degradation into another.  From the slavery of the plantation they entered slavery as sharecroppers, house servants, and laborers in the factories of the north.  Most had to live on unjust wages simply because their skin was black and they had not been allowed a decent education.  In this new form of slavery that spanned well over a hundred years there wasn’t even the slim hope that they would be taken care of in their old age.  Having given them “freedom” white America shunned them, mocked them, and did everything possible to deepen their misery.  Is it any wonder that so many of their children hate us?  If you were a child of the slaves would you not think white people were evil?

We are facing the racial crisis of today because long ago our nation, supposedly built on “Christian principles,” acted more like the pagan, slave-owning society of ancient Rome than a country “enlightened” by the love and truth of Jesus Christ.  And every year that we don’t acknowledge our guilt and seek to make restitution the tragedy deepens.

May I suggest a plan?  It’s not exactly reparations, but it would be a first step in admitting what we owe and saying to our black citizens how much we appreciate who they are and what their ancestors did for us.  It would be a first step in telling them that they are valuable and we believe in them.  Maybe it could be the beginning of true racial healing.  There are some who will laugh at this plan.  There are some who will say it can’t be done.  But in America almost anything is possible.  All I know is this – it would be an honest attempt to right a wrong.

So, here it is:

I suggest that Congress pass a new law.  Starting in January 2016, all Americans who can prove that there is at least one slave among their ancestors are exempt from all taxes.  And I do mean ALL TAXES – federal, state, and local, both hidden and otherwise, from property taxes right down to sales taxes.  And this law would remain in effect for 120 years.  (An arbitrary span covering approximately four generations.  Embarrassingly less than the centuries of slave labor.)  This full exemption from taxes would include all wholly owned black businesses.  All normal benefits would accrue to black employees.  FICA contributions would be paid by the federal government.  If a white employer hired a black employee, he would still pay the employer’s share of all taxes.  But the black employee would not pay his portion.  A wholly owned black company would be exempt from paying all employment taxes on either white or black employees.  Only if a black-owned company went public would it enter taxable status.

What would be the result of such a law?  I’m no economist but I believe that while the first decade would be a difficult transition, it would be an investment in the future.  Within twenty years the black community would become an economic powerhouse.  Within twenty years the poorest neighborhoods in our inner cities could be revolutionized.  Young people whose only motivation is to sell drugs would be given a massive incentive to go into legitimate businesses.  Capital would pour into black companies.  Individually, hard-working African-Americans would have at least 20-30 percent more money to spend on themselves and their families.  This increased spending would explode into every area of the economy including taxable businesses ultimately growing the economy and increasing tax revenues far beyond the taxes that were lost.  Most important of all the African-American community might begin to experience hope.  Would the “Tax Freedom for the Children of Slaves Act” answer every problem? No.  But I believe the positive impact would be felt at every level of our society.

What are the objections?

  1. We can’t afford it.” My response is that we can’t afford to go on the way we are.  We can’t afford the overwhelming poverty of our inner cities.  We can’t afford the armies of police that have to battle gangs that outnumber them ten or twenty to one.  We can’t afford the rescue workers, the medical costs, the loser schools that try to teach children who come from families without hope.  Subtract a third of the cost of our broken inner cities and how many tax dollars would we save?  As black enterprise thrived money would flow throughout our whole economy.  It’s possible that within a decade such a program would pay for itself.  There is even a homeland security dividend.  Safer cities and less poverty would mean that much less fertile ground for terrorists.
  2. “It isn’t fair. It discriminates by giving an undue advantage to a class of people.”  My response is hogwash.  We weren’t afraid to enslave and discriminate against black people for hundreds of years.  I think we owe them 120 years of tax freedom.
  3. “It would be a nightmare to organize and maintain.” Well, we organized and maintain monstrous social security and Medicare systems.  We organized and maintain an Internal Revenue Service and tax system of gargantuan complexity.  We organized and maintain welfare programs that give new meaning to the word byzantine.  And many Americans would love to see us organize and maintain a behemoth national health care system.  This seems simple compared to those monstrosities.  It’s true such a program would be difficult, especially at first, but not impossible.

Progressives should love this concept.  Supporting it would prove that they really do have compassion and desire justice.  It would prove that their carping about tax breaks for the rich isn’t just a subterfuge to hide their love for all taxation.  And, it would be a federal program that might actually work for a change.  Conservatives should love this concept because it would give them an historic opportunity to prove that their theories about free enterprise and low taxation are correct.  The tax-free black community would be a laboratory out of which could come irrefutable evidence about the value of tax relief.

But, will progressives and conservatives back such a radical concept?  Not until hell freezes over.  Forgive me for being cynical, but let’s be honest.  We know the truth.  If the Tax Freedom for the Children of Slaves Act became a reality and true financial success came to African-Americans on the widest possible scale, liberals would lose an important constituency that they’ve been able to manipulate with fear and hatred for decades.  And they’ve done it in collusion with so-called black advocacy groups.  What would happen if the NAACP, Jesse Jackson, and Al Sharpton weren’t needed anymore?  If there was real hope and success in the black community even the abortion industry would be damaged.  Most abortions are performed on hopeless young black women.  This would force the Democratic Party redefine itself.

And the Republicans are no better.  They would be just as against the concept because they really are the party of big business.  The monstrous corporations of today are the enemies of free enterprise.  Their CEO’s would impale themselves on their golf clubs before allowing such tax-free competition.  They’d rather buy cheap labor in India and let our inner cities rot.  And what big business wants the Republican Party will give them.

But I confess that I have another fear and it brings great sadness.  I fear that the average white American, progressive or conservative, Christian or not, would never back such a concept.  He’d rather maintain the status quo of racial hate and agony than lift one finger to see real change.  Why?  Because agony and hate are the soul of modern political entertainment.  And we love our entertainment…just like the ancient Romans.

Addendum 2020:

Recently, someone asked me what I would do for Native Americans who have suffered so much.  I would put all national parks under their care and control.  All money that came from both visitor fees and concessions would go to them. A Native American National Park Service would be established which would answer  to the Department of Interior.  Such a plan would be appropriate and just considering all the land that was stolen from them.

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7 comments

  1. AMW · May 7, 2015

    Do you believe that the citizens of modern West Africa are also morally responsible to pay reparations? Their ancestors sold African Americans’ ancestors into slavery.

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    • Coleman Luck · May 7, 2015

      Yes, to anyone in their countries who may have suffered from it. But let’s be honest, the vast financial benefit of slavery accrued to America. Let each country be responsible for its own actions.

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  2. AMW · May 7, 2015

    I’m not at all convinced that slavery benefited the American economy as a whole. GDP growth in the United States did not appreciably slow down after the Civil War, nor after the Civil Rights Era. The primary effect of slavery is to transfer wealth from the slave to the slave owner, not to increase production overall. If anything slavery probably makes the economic pie smaller. Industrialization and prosperity tend to occur in areas where workers’ rights are protected (compare East vs. West Germany, North vs. South Korea, etc.).

    Regarding reparations from West African nations, my point is that the descendants of the people they harmed live in our national borders, not theirs. And the principle of restitution does not depend on the offending party profiting from the offense. If I damage your house the principle of restitution morally obliges me to pay for the repairs, despite the fact that the damage did not enrich me. Consequently, if the descendants of slave purchasers in the United States owe reparations, it seems that the descendants of slave sellers in West Africa owe reparations as well. But then we face the prospect of poor African blacks paying relatively prosperous American blacks, which hardly seems like justice.

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    • Coleman Luck · May 7, 2015

      I have heard such arguments before. They seem extremely narrow in their focus. Certainly it was more than the slave owner that benefited from slavery. The bankers of New England benefited as did the magnates of the shipping business and others. Wealth transferred in a number of directions. What happened after the Civil War? Former slaves were cut loose with no assistance in transition. Where did many of them wind up? Cheap labor in northern factories. I’m not certain what your GDP numbers mean after the Civil War. Apart from slavery, the loss of more than 600,000 able-bodied men from the work force should have had a profound effect? If it didn’t, why didn’t it? That is a significant percentage of the entire population. Did the new work force of former slaves become replacement labor that assisted the GDP? Regarding the analogy about damaging my house. So you and a cohort operating together damage my house. For some reason, the cohort is destitute, dead or has absconded to parts unknown and cannot be reached. I think there is a rather strong legal case to be made that you should be responsible for all of it. At any rate, thanks for your thoughts. I do enjoy the conversation.

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  3. AMW · May 7, 2015

    I should note one other thing. To me the case for reparations seems very weak. However, as long as the tax cuts you propose would be offset with spending cuts (i.e., as long as my taxes weren’t going up) I would be willing to give your plan a shot. And while we’re at it, I would recommend cutting the spending from programs that tend to disadvantage African Americans, such as the drug war.

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  4. Coleman Luck · May 7, 2015

    I agree with you, in particular about the so-called Drug War. As I said in the essay, from a conservative viewpoint tax cuts should benefit everyone. Of course, getting the government to cut any spending program is like battling hell itself.

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  5. Todd Coleman · September 1, 2016

    Thank you for your thoughtful (and wonderfully radical) attempt to address / redress the historical injustice of slavery.

    I share (and am grateful for) your passion for justice, a passion that comes straight from the Bible itself. (It’s amazing how many Christians think “justice” is a “godless, liberal agenda,” not a biblical mandate and command.) I’m also grateful for your insistence that the injustice of slavery and its generational after-effects be addressed head-on. (One non-economic “consequence” of slavery: Slave owners destroyed the black family unit by separating fathers and mothers from their spouses and children, creating a “tear” in the family fabric that is still felt generations later.) I agree 1000% that Christians need to move beyond our two-party political “solutions” to find “Christian” solutions from God, not passed down from the current powers and principalities that be. (I’m thinking most Republican here—wink, wink—but Democrats bear their fair share of false beliefs and internal contradictions.)

    All that said, I’m afraid your beautiful premise is flawed in some significant, foundational ways. (Don’t worry, I have a solution), to wit:

    1) We can’t identify the descendants
    Your reparations solution has a practical, financial cost. In order to be a “just” solution, that cost should be borne by the direct benefactors of slavery (and no one else) and should be “paid/repaid” to the direct descendants of slaves (and no one else). But how are we going to identify the “real” descendants of slaves and slave owners? That sounds to me sounds like 300 million lawsuits, each trying to “prove” that I am “in” this camp or “not in” the other.

    2) We are a nation of immigrants.
    Is it fair to make the descendants of latter-day immigrants—the tax-paying children of Irish, Italian, German, Swedish, Mexican, Japanese, Chinese, Nigerian, Vietnamese, Nicaraguan, you-name-it immigrants—bear the financial cost of something they had nothing to do with? And is it fair to “repay” American blacks, many of whom are children of immigrants from the Caribbean, Latin America or Africa? This is clearly not a black-and-white issue (pun intended), since not all whites owned slaves, not all slaves were black, not all slave owners were white, many abolitionists were white, etc., etc.

    3) Per the Bible, sons should NOT pay for the sins of the father.
    (Deuteronomy 24:16)–“Fathers shall not be put to death for their sons, nor shall sons be put to death for their fathers; everyone shall be put to death for his own sin.” The clear context of Deut. 24:6-19 shows that this “rule of law” is specifically intended as a biblical guide for legal matters. (I could stop here, but I’m on a roll.)

    4) Per the Bible, sons and daughters often DO pay for the sins of the father—for 4 generations max!
    (Exodus 20:5 and Deuteronomy 5:9)—“For I, the Lord your God, am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers on the children, on the third and the fourth generations of those who hate Me.” This “law of consequences” is descriptive, not prescriptive, from God and not from man, and is therefore not relevant for legal reparations—and even if it was, it would “expire” after 4 generations!

    5) We are ALL victims, and life is not fair.
    A vast number of 20th- and 21-century US immigrants were refugees escaping war, persecution, genocide, etc. Will they be looking for reparations, too? Everyone born on planet earth is a victim of something. Heck, even rich kids addicted to heroin are legitimate “victims” of parental neglect, consumerism, entitlement, etc. Why else do we tell our kids over and over, “Life isn’t fair”? Because we don’t want them to indulge in self-pity and self-defined victimization. Slavery reparations would reinforce the already-crippling sense of resentment and victimization in America’s inner cities. Like the welfare state and affirmative action—which have their appropriate place and time—reparations would have unintended effects like passivity (I can’t help myself) and entitlement (I deserve to be taken care of by you). There has been more than enough of that in the black community, as we are hearing from more and more black leaders.

    6) The current racial divide is not an economic issue, and money can’t address it or “fix” it.
    The consequences of slavery were not merely economic, they were social, spiritual, psychological, cultural, etc., etc. The current racial tensions—which, should be noted, are less intense than they have even been in history—are primarily a RELATIONAL issue…and ONLY relationships can heal it.

    The ONLY solution to hatred is love (not politics or tax benefits).

    My proposed alternative to slavery reparations is shockingly simple. All of the racial and economic problems we are facing today in America could be solved IN A SINGLE GENERATION if we tried this very simple thing, which is…

    ** Every privileged Christian in America (black, white, or green) reaches out to one—count ’em, one, ONLY ONE—underprivileged person within their own community. **

    That’s it. Here’s how I know it works:

    Immediately after the LA Riots, my church at the time (All Saints Episcopal in Beverly Hills) invited black pastors from South-Central to speak to the congregation for a series of Monday nights to address the root problems and long-term solutions that caused the riots. Here’s what they told us…

    The core problem was (and is) fatherlessness in the black community—which is a direct consequence of slavery through the systematic dismantling, division and sale of black family members). That’s why 99.9% of men in prison in 1994 (and today) never had a relationship with their father. Thus the long-term solution was and is mentoring: Black men in particular need mentors. Without a father figure—someone, anyone who cares enough to become involved in their lives—the cycle of victimization, passivity, gangs (a “solution” for fatherless sons) and crime will continue unabated.

    The black pastors explained that all it takes to dramatically change a life (of a gang member, drop-out, or repeat offender) is show them that ONE person “on the outside” (i.e., not from the inner city) CARES.

    THAT’S ALL IT TAKES. If you don’t believe me, ask anyone who has ever volunteered as a Big Brother or Big Sister. “We don’t care what you know, until we know that you care.”

    In 1994 I began mentoring “Bootsie” (Anthony Coleman—my ancestors apparently owned his ancestors). Anthony was a serious OG, co-founder of the Rollin 60s Crips, one of the most powerful gangs in the prison system. He had been in and out of prison 50 times by the time I met him, at age 32. We started hanging out on Sundays at the Third Street Promenade. I took him to the beach for the first time (as an adult Angeleno). He became a Christian and started volunteering at the church’s soup kitchen, and eventually he got into drug rehab, got a job and a car and a wife and kids.

    The road has had some major ups, downs and sinkholes, but Anthony stopped being my “mentee” a long time ago—today he’s my road dog, my best friend, and as close to me (or closer) than my own brothers. He is a powerful force for good in society who daily inspires, mentors and counsels convicts and at-risk youth.

    Please consider becoming a mentor.

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