
By Boston Woodard
Ghetto by the Sea is the second anthology by some extraordinarily talented teenagers and young adults at Venice High School in Los Angeles County. These writers, poets, artists and photographers are members of POPS the Club (Pain of the Prison System). High school teacher/writer Dennis Danziger and journalist/author Amy Friedman created POPS the Club for students who were adversely affected by having a parent, sibling, friend, cousin, godparent, uncle or aunt in prison or jail.
POPS the Club has been privileged to host a number of powerful guest speakers and supporters over the past couple of years including Hollywood film producer and founder of the Anti-Recidivism Coalition Scott Budnick; powerhouse speaker and artist Khanisha Foster; prison rights activists Franky Carillo, Bruce Lisker and Madeline Brand of NPR; Obie Anthony; Lakeisha Burton; writer Christina McDowell; and Los Angeles poet laureate Luis J. Rodriguez; and former NBA player Cuttino Mobley. California Inspector General Robert Barton, after reading an article about POPS the Club in the Community Alliance, said, āThere should be a POPS the Club in every high schoolātransforming hidden shame to hope and hope into healing.ā
The newly released Ghetto by the Sea is jam-packed with amazing stories about life under the unfortunate circumstances of loving someone who is incarcerated. As a special gift to us, POPS the Club members exhibit their talents and emotions on 179 pages with in Ghetto by the Sea. āGhetto by the Seaā is the title of an opening poem by DeāJon K. Jones. The poignant revelations throughout the poem speak volumes of the tumultuous life young kids and students are left with as a result of the incarceration of a family member.
I come from paradise on one street to the āhood on the nextā¦
I come from not staying out too late, ācause thatās playing with your lifeā¦
I come from being an athlete by day and a gang member by nightā¦
I come from where if you make it to see age 18, youāve hit a milestone in lifeā¦
I come from where sirens and helicopters are normal in lifeā¦
I come from where 90% of us donāt have a father figure, and 100% of our mothers worry about if weāll make it back home once we step out of the houseā¦
I come from where if the police interrogate us, we forget how to speak Englishā¦
I come from Venice, CA. 90zoo91, the Ghetto by the seaā¦
Danzinger and Friedmanās introduction explains that āthe way to inspire teenagers to dig deep and to be brave enough to reveal their innermost feelings and share their stories is this: Stop talking and listening.ā
Students indeed dug deep to complete this anthology. The stories, essays, poetry, art and photography between the covers are emotional truths written about the life of a POPS kid. Writer Angel De La Cruzās essay, āAll My Life,ā reveals hard facts of pain of the prison system: āSince I was five, my father has been in and out of prison. I last saw him ten years ago when I was eight,ā said Cruz. āI always wanted a real dad who would toughen me up, play catch with meā¦One that would play video games with me or give me those guy lectures and life advice.ā
Angelee Velasquez wrote in āDefining Myself ā about how her mother is the reason that she is an independent young woman who will be successful, āI was raised by one woman. A strong woman. Who told me that a manās approval does not need to define me.ā
Dannie Maddox, who lived through the devastating reality of being raised around āalcoholics, druggies, and violence,ā wrote of this lifestyle in a narrative titled āBecause of You.ā āI was taught to become violent when someone tries to control me or walk over me. I was raised around gang members and criminals. From the time I was six, they were teaching me how to defend myself at all times,ā said Maddox.
The anthologyās interior photographs by Eduardo Hernandez and illustrated portraits by Hannah Schatzle throughout are as deft as any professional artist. The anthologyās book design/layout by Tracy Atkins and cover photos by Victor L.M. Demic are amazing. In addition, there is a Friends of POPS section of authors, free world and incarcerated writers, Venice High School graduates and teachers who continue to support and contribute to POPS the Club.
Word about POPS the Club is spreading. Conley-Caraballo High School in Hayward recently introduced a POPS the Club, the second in the nation. Soon weāll be reading their stories too in that clubās anthology.
POPS the Club was created āas a place for those who have endured the pain of isolation, the sorrow and stigma of prison to find friendship, community, comradeship, compassion, healing and, most of all, a place that celebrates all they have to say,ā said Danziger and Friedman.
For students to reveal themselves, āthey demand respect. They need to know that their stories and creations will be taken seriously,ā said Danziger. āEach of the anthologyās contributions exhibits courage, intelligence, honesty and self-respect.ā
Ghetto by the Sea lets us all know that these students, these gifted young peopleās lives, no matter where they live, know and love, matter. For more information about Ghetto by the Sea, visit www.popstheclub.com, www.facebook.com/popstheclub or Twitter: @popstheclub.
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Boston Woodard is a prisoner and author of Inside the Broken California Prison System (www. amazon. com). He is a freelance writer and has been a contributor to the Community Alliance since 2005. Boston has coauthored a new book Prison: The Ins and Outs (to be published soon) with longtime prisoner advocate and journalist Maria Telesco.