Just a sample of the Echomail archive
Cooperative anarchy at its finest, still active today. Darkrealms is the Zone 1 Hub.
|    COFFEE_KLATSCH    |    Gossip and chit-chat echo    |    2,835 messages    |
[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]
|    Message 1,643 of 2,835    |
|    Delitra Shabazz to Roger Nelson    |
|    The way I was raised    |
|    25 May 16 06:18:16    |
      Roger,              Wow... this is the first time I have posted anything on a BBS since       before my son was born. I have something to share and it comes from       my life.              I grew up in the housing projects in the West End of Louisville and       there were many of them. Park Duvalle, California, Beecher Terrace,       Shepherd Square... there were others but those were the four we were       moved to and fro as mama had more children.              Mom and Dad wer on again off again. I know housing projects are seen as       crime ridden communities... and I know that some see them as drug dens.       This wasn't so prevalent back in the 1970s and 1980s. One thing I can       say as more kids arrived we were moved to bigger units to accommodate       our family.              Daddy wasn't a deadbeat... not at all, he worked two jobs until he got       hurt. You see he was a "disposable negro" and he became unable to work.       That's how we ended up in the projects as I am the oldest of my brothers       and sisters who did not know the nice house we once rented.              You can't say that we were on the tit of the government milking it for       all we can get because Mama worked for the white folk cooking and       housecleaning. In the 1970's there just wasn't that many jobs that paid       well for a black woman with a 4th grade education. Everyone told her       that she needed to go get her GED but at the time of Daddy's injry they       had three kids and we were in the California housing project. It was a       cesspool even back then and it was the first housing project that was       torn down. It was a sore spot because this housing project actually had       signs and lettring painted on the building that said "Negro Housing" and       they were nothing but ugly cinder block and concrete buildings. Even       the walls were cinder block no drywall it was gold in the winter them       old buildings seemed to radiate the cold in the winter and the heat in       the summer.              We were only there temporarily and the city moved us to Park Duvalle       which was a nicer project. It too has been torn down and replaced with       nice HUD townhomes... people pay some rent to live there and they have       poor white, black, and now mostly mexican and muslim people there. Park       Duvalle also houses a lot of disabled as it has a fully functional       public health clinic there. I guess it is a blessing there too.               The city had us set up nice... there were two girls and one boy. I was       so happy to be out of the California neighborhood. I was five, my       sister was two and my brother just a baby not even one at this time.              We didn't have the best of everything but we were no longer in the       cinder block building. This place reminded me much of the military base       housing for the enlisted. Everyone had the same apartment... tiny       kitchen with an area to the side to eat in. Tiny sitting room where we       watched TV and upstairs were two beddrooms one for mom and Dad and the       baby and another for us two girls. We knew we would eventually outgrow       it and move when my brother got older because the social workers would       not allow him to stay in with mom and dad past two years... nor would       they allow us to bunk with a boy in our room.              Right before Jimmy turned two we were moved to the best place... Beecher       Terrace which was the newest and the only housing project downtown that       still stands in Louisville. Jimmy was slow, he was a special needs       child. Mama said they used forcepts to pull him out and damaged him...       he is still disabled today and lives in the disabled housing tower       called Dosker manor. That is the place of nightmares, but he is       independant and not institutionalized.              I guess Mama could have had a lawsuit if she knew better.              Beecher terrace was like living in a small park like community like the       apartment complexes the white peopel live in. It was the late 1970's       and the school system decided to bus all the black kids from downtown to       dozens of schools in the suburbs and then bus all the white kids from       the suburbs to the black schools downtown. It is sad but I guess       necessary. I went to a differnet elementary school forty miles away       than my sister who went to one forty miles away in the other direction.       None of our friends in the community went to the same school.               The white kids got bussed downtown on a lottery system. Some of us       black kids were allowed to stay in our neighborhood schools so that they       were appropriately "mixed" but not many. The white kids were just as       confused as we were. This practice still happens today even though the       suburbs now have black people living in them. Our schools are insane       bussing kids all over the city to keep some calculated racial balance.       The politicians holler "climate change" yet we are bussing kids       thousands of miles around the city every day when most of us really       could walk to the neighborhood schools. That's how I was told it was       done in the 1950's.              Mama worked, but we managed to always have food on our table... and it       was good food. It wasn't the best of food, but it was good food usually       fried chicken, chitterlings (or chitlin's or shitlins depending on how       you called it) and the cheaper roasts and cuts of meat. Then there was       the free government cheese. We were thankfull for it, now people get it       and don't really appreciate it or think it is good enough but it kept us       from starving.              I worked hard to get my education. I'm ashamed of black kids now day for       not taking advantage of the opportunities they have before them. They       worship their hip hop idols and not the Lord. They care nothing about       their elders, yet in my day it was mama and the old folk in the       community that helped us young folk get through.               I was blessed as I got all the new clothes, my poor sister Ruth, God       rest her poor soul, never knew what it was like to have anything new. I       remember one easter the year before I graduated high school when I       bought her a new pair of shoes for Easter Sunday service, she hardly       would wear them because they blistered her feet. Poor girl never had a       pair of shoes that wasn't already broken in. I was blessed to have a       job at 17 at the Indi's Fried Chicken restaraunt. Ruth was murdered by       her boyfriend when she was only 17, I was away at college and I was       unable to protect her. Since I was gone and poor Ruth was dead my family       was moved to their final housing project in Shepherd Square it was small       and there was a lot of crime there. LOTS and LOTS of crime. Daddy's       pain was more than he could bear and he started to self medicate with       alcohol. He didn't live long after the move.                     Anyhow kids nowday don't know the struggle, it was the old folk who       helped sew up our clothes when they got holes in it. It was the old       folk who were our greatest treasure. We learned respect from them as if       we misbehaved in public we got tole on and sometimes even spanked by       them. Then when we got home we got spanked, sometiems again. They say       spanking makes people have bad self esteem. I am proud that I was       spanked when I needed it. No one ever lay a hand on me that I didn't       deserve it... and I am thankful for it. I think that's why I did so       well in school becuase I know what would be waiting for me at home if I       had a bad grade.              I graduated from college in 1988 as a Registered nurse Jimmy was more       than mama could take care of at this point and they institutionalized       him for a while. They moved mama to the old Waverly Hills TB sanitorum       which had become a state run nursing home. No one can hardly ever       remember the name of that nursing home but it was the place of       nightmares. It always smelled of urine and old feces. It was where       people were sent to die. I was fortunate and worked at the Catholic       Hospiral St. Mary and Elizabeth.              Mama died and some law got passed that made it unconstitutional to       institutionalize Jimmy, I'm no lawyer so I have no idea how it freed him       but in 1999 just before the infamous Y2K they put Jimmy in Dosker Manor       and he stayed there until someone beat him to death for being in the       wrong place at the wrong time in 2012.              My employer has changed and it was St. Mary and Elizabeth, then it       became Caritas hospital (supposted to be latin for care and love we       called it the Carrot Top Hospital). Then back to St. Marys and the old       nuns that owned the hospital sold it to the Jewish Hospital. There's       still a nun there that lives on premesis... she jokes that she now sings       Oy Vey Maria for the holidays. It's not the same hospital that it once       was not as clean, and tidy.              I look back at my time in the projects as I now have a nice home in       Lyndon, an upper middle class neighborhood in Louisville. I shop at       Whole foods, and go to the mall, something I didn't know existed when I       was a kid.               All the housing projects are torn down except for Beecher Terrace which       has became so bad that if you are a non-resident and accidentally turn       into the premises you will be instantly stopped by the police asking       what your business is there. It's where 20% of the murders in our city       come from. Not the place of my childhood....               But one thing I can say is in those old buildings labled "Negro Housing"       there was love... and lots of it. We learned respect, and learned the       value of education.              Most of my generation pulled ourselves up out of that mess but I look       around now and see young folk who aren't even trying. It makes me       ashamed... I'm only 5 years younger than when momma died... and I know I       will live longer than she did. I look at my hands and remember how bony       hers were... how her skin was stretched tightly across her bones. None       of us knew at the time that the kids ate first... then Daddy and poor       mama often ate what she scraped from the bottom of the pan or what meat       that was left on the chicken ones that we didn't eat.              No the kids of today do not know the struggles we have had to go       through... nor do they know what it's like to be hungry... but the       saddest thing of all is I really don't believe that any of them know the       love we had either. Love of their mama... ove of their daddy... love of       the old people.               I am so sad... the kids deserve better and I feel like we have failed       them in every way possible. Our government is the problem not the       solution... the more that they keep being given to the more that they       want. None of them want to work for anything anymore... none of them       care about what they have. As the post Roger posted they fixed       things... we fixed things too... we sewed we made do or did without.              Kids now days never had to do without. I am thankful for everything I       have.              I didn't think old BBS systems still exist. Glad I found this one.              Delitra Marie Shabazz                                                                             --- Platinum Xpress/Win/WINServer v3.0pr5        * Origin: Derby City LiveWire - Louisville, KY - livewirebbs.dy (1:2320/100)    |
[   << oldest   |   < older   |   list   |   newer >   |   newest >>   ]
(c) 1994, bbs@darkrealms.ca