Posts Tagged ‘economy’

An American Place

Thursday, September 27th, 2012

September 19, 2012
Brooklyn, New York

Hay Springs, Nebraska is not a town easy to forget. I first traveled there in the winter of 2004 for the funeral of Sergeant Cory Mracek, a paratrooper killed in Iraq. Despite the bitter cold, every car on rural Route 20, which cuts across Sheridan County, pulled over onto the side of the road to salute the passing funeral procession. In the very small towns of Hay Springs, Rushville, and Gordon, residents bundled up in coats lined the street with American flags. I am a person who remembers things visually; so this summer, when I was searching for an American story, I immediately thought of those pick-up trucks on the side of the road. I had not made a picture then, but I knew it was a place to return to, a place that, in my mind, spoke of an older, more traditional America.


Residents of Hay Springs, Nebraska, line up to watch the funreal procession for Cory Mracek pass by,
February 4, 2004.

In the heat of August, I decided to photograph the drought that has paralyzed the farms and crops across a giant stretch of the American heartland. While the drought is very real, and its effects have been devastating for many who earn their living growing and harvesting the food that we all eat, I knew before I even left that I was thinking about more than the physics of the weather. Like with any news event, the drought becomes a prism through which to perceive something more meaningful to me, something harder to explain in a sound byte. I wanted to explore our own country, its conservative bedrock, and gain a better understanding of some of the deep divisions that separate that hinterland from the coasts. If the drought was what got me there, I hoped to stay for the chance to visit a culture very different from my own here in Brooklyn.

Sheridan County is in the remote northwest corner of Nebraska. Named after the Indian fighter General Phillip Sheridan, who systematically slaughtered the buffalo that roamed the high plains in order to starve his Sioux and Cheyenne enemies, many attitudes feel as if they have been fixed in time. Though just a dozen miles south of the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation, Sheridan County is ninety-nine percent white, and local prejudice against the Native Americans on the reservation runs deep. The cattle that quickly replaced the buffalo are watched over by the descendents of the immigrant settlers who labored to tame the land, killing the wolf, bear, and lion. These men and women lived outside of any city’s gates. They fought and died to claim this land as their own, in spite of whatever obstacles faraway easterners from New York or Washington placed in their way.

During my stay in Hay Springs, my hosts were Jim Mracek and his wife Pat, the parents of Cory, whose death had brought me to Sheridan County eight years earlier. Generous to a fault, always willing to help a neighbor, or stranger, in need, the Mraceks are at the same time wary of the larger world that seems to have moved on.

Jim is a caretaker for a 5,000-acre cattle ranch. Like many people who live off of the land, Jim seems to have paid close attention to his surroundings. Dependent upon God’s creatures, it’s easy enough to conclude that the world is a harsh, unforgiving place. At the same time, there is a natural order, an accepted balance, and a rhythm to life that doesn’t have to be questioned or struggled over. On the ranch, there is no such thing as can’t. Hard work and patience and then more hard work solve almost any problem, of which there are many: another fence to mend, a stray calf to find, a pivot to check.

I failed at fully understanding the political beliefs of this deeply conservative part of the nation. The gap between basic political assumptions in rural western Nebraska and my own was just too large to build a bridge over. But self-reliance, hard work, an older, more intimate, connected America; these were all attributes where I could find great beauty, visual and otherwise.

Looking above, into the vast, blue Nebraska sky of the open prairie, I could see the jet streams of the airplanes flying from coast to coast. This is what I wanted to try and photograph, I realized. A place, an American Place, that the rest of the nation only sees from the plane window, those grids of intersecting dirt roads mapped across the seemingly endless expanse of land, viewed from 40,000 feet above.

UPDATE, Sept. 27: The Commerce Department’s report released today downgraded the growth rate of the GDP from 1.7% to 1.3%, citing the effects of the severe drought reducing crop yields and farm inventory.

PHOTOGRAPHS + TEXT by Andrew Lichtenstein / facingchange.org

Editor: Jamie Wellford, Photo

With support from Leica Camera

FIGHTING BACK Cleveland’s Inner City Boxing

Monday, May 7th, 2012

In the heart of inner city Cleveland decimated by post-industrial unemployment, extensive foreclosures and vacant properties, lies the Manor House. Coach Fred Wilson has dedicated himself to turning drug dealers and users into boxers, hoping to give them a positive outlook on life.

A striking depiction of the crucifixion is painted on the back door of the House, just a half-block from Coach Fred’s home where he trains kids several times a week. On those evenings the space transforms itself into heat, sweat and muscle. It is a place into which the kids crowd and dream of glory, or, more to the point – to escape Cleveland’s impoverished realities and violent confrontations.

–Anthony Suau


Cleveland, Ohio 2011 Back entrance to the Manor House.

“What I saw in my neighborhood was a lot of drug sellers and a lot of drug users and they would sell right in front of my home. At the time, my kids were small, maybe two or three, I knew once you have drug trafficking, you have a lot of shootings, and it’s always the innocent bystander that gets shot – not the drug dealers. So they would make drug transactions right in front of my home and I got real upset, so being a former boxer I would run up and scare the customers away and I would grab the kids and I would want to kill them.

At that time I was the president of a street club, “The Brotherside Drug Free Zone” and we would brainstorm trying to figure out a way to take the streets back from the kids and we tried calling the police but it seemed like the police would warn the kids. One time I saw the kids sitting on a police car selling drugs, so I called the police. I said “hey, you know they are sitting on you car and they’re selling drugs” and I saw he came out of the mini-station down the street, and talked to the kids and pointed down the street and then he drove his car to me and said, “Yeah, I got rid of them, they’re not sitting on my car no more.” Then I saw the kids just give me a funny look and I said “Wow, maybe it’s deeper than what I thought.”


Cleveland, Ohio 2011 Working out before boxing.

One particular time, I grabbed this kid and said, “Don’t you EVER do that again.” I was gonna beat the living daylights out of him. And this kid said … he said, “Sir, I’m sorry.” I said “WHAT DID YOU SAY TO ME?” He said, “I’m sorry – I didn’t know” and right then I said, “there’s some hope in that kid. This was the only thing he knew and right then I said he just needs guidance and he just needs direction.” So I would take those kids, talk to them and at the time, I would bring them into my basement. I have a bag down there and I would teach them and then I would talk to them about life, about what they were doing out there and why they were doing it. I got to meet the kids that I hated so much, and I saw what was their motivation: they just didn’t know. They had nobody to tell them not to do it. They left school, and that was their education, that’s the only way they knew to make money. So I would talk to the kids, and, I grew not just to like the kids, I grew to love them.

Now what I do is deal with at-risk youth and I try to take them out of the element of street violence or selling drugs and give them a positive outlook on life.

Each kid is different, I try to give them more than just boxing. I get involved in their lives and that’s what every kid needs. A lot of kids, they don’t have fathers; they have a mother but she’s not really there. Many kids came through that life of violence and drugs; but I really don’t have all the resources to completely protect them and take them off the street, and a lot of it’s gotta be up to them. I can only plant a seed and show ‘em. I’ve got five kids myself so, I can’t take them in.

Early on, I was dealing with maybe 20 kids. I had a minivan and they all wouldn’t fit in my minivan, so I had the bigger ones run to the gym. It was maybe three miles, three miles from where we trained and I would have them run and I would trail them in the van. Then I would have them run back after practice.

They were running six miles a day. Rain, snow, wintertime they would run, summertime. Yeah, yeah. (laughing) They ran a lot.

In 2003 we went down to Kansas City for the national tournament. We had one title that year. The next year we came back and had at least three. So we were pretty much established, as a team, as a good team, but we still didn’t have good facilities but the people we box against, they don’t know that and they still don’t.

We were recently offered a space at the Y, it’s a blessing because the rate people are calling, they want to join. They all want to box and at the time when we had 50 kids, I said, we can’t, we couldn’t even fit 25, so I had to break them up into days. We still need a ring. We still need equipment. We got a makeshift ring that we use down there, but I feel like if you are doing the right thing, positive things are gonna happen.

I ended up turning kids away because I just didn’t have enough room. I know a lot of kids, I had to buy their license for them, my wife hates that, but a lot of kids, they don’t have the money and I don’t want them breaking in or stealing cars, or doing what they had to do to get the money, so I would try to do it.


Cleveland, Ohio 2011 Coach Fred Wilson and Deloren Grey at the “Y” to train.

Boxer Deloren Grey’s (Dee) got a lot of potential. He’s a kid that needs a lot of positive reinforcement as far as his boxing is concerned. He’s a great kid but every kid has the potential to do the wrong thing, but Dee is focused and he loves his family. When he came to me, he was boxing for another coach, the coach didn’t particularly have a lot of knowledge as far as boxing is concerned.

Dee picked up on it early because when we went over to his old gym to spar, he saw the way my kids respond, he saw the way that they move their hands, they move their feet. He would come to me for pointers and hey, I’m going to give it to you. I’m gonna give you the truth, if you’re a good kid – I will help you. He’s been doing great. I’ve been showing him how to bring his power from twisting because he’s a very strong kid. By him being compact, his body attack can be vicious and I’m showing him how to use his body attack. He sees it now, he knows how to rotate his hips to generate power. He’s just a little bottle of TNT and if he hits you, he can hurt you bad.


Columbus, Ohio 2011 Moments before the fight Deloren kneels in the corner and says a prayer and dedicates
the fight to his father who was buried in Los Angeles on that same day.

I try to relate boxing to life because life will knock you down. But you can’t just lay down, you’ve got to get back up and especially where we live, you’ve got to get back up and you’ve got to keep going. Sometimes, you’ve got to get picked up and that’s what I do, I pick them up. If they have any issue outside of boxing, we’ll sit here all night and we’ll talk about it, because I’m a mentor, I’m a father, they’re my kids. They’re not just my boxers.

When I lose a kid to the streets, or I lose a kid to violence, especially violence, you know that bothers me, ‘cuz like I said, they’re my kids. My sons and my daughters. It took me a while to realize I’m not going to save them all. I’m lucky if I can save one. My wife – she tried to help me to realize that too. I just can’t explain: it hurts real bad, and to lose a kid to violence, that’s oh my God, that’s the worst, that’s the worst feeling ever. So, I hope to never feel that again.


Columbus, Ohio 2011 To celebrate Delorian’s victory the team share a pizza in their hotel room.

I wanna see all the kids make it and that’s crazy to say but I think it can be done. I think there’s grant money out there that I haven’t tapped into that would help this gym and if I could get the kids where they’re not worried about money. If I got a government grant coming in every year, I could build the type of facility that I need, that has dormitories that can house some of the kids. We could really focus on the task at hand, which is boxing, and to help, get some pros out there.

Cleveland is very competitive when it comes to boxing but Philly’s a tough town too. I like to say Detroit is sorta like Cleveland, you got hungry boxers, but I kinda love Philly boxers. A lot of them put the sweet sides together, like the way I would teach it. They got a particular style…a lot of punches, a lot of movement. Philly’s a tough town to go against. I’m glad we don’t have to go too much against Philly.

That’s what I say in the Golden Gloves … it is hard to make it out of Cleveland because to me the best competition is here in Cleveland. I don’t want to say it’s a cakewalk, but it’s a little easier.”

–Coach Fred Wilson

PHOTOGRAPHS and Interview by ANTHONY SUAU

With support from Leica Camera

Occupy May Day 2012

Thursday, May 3rd, 2012

Facing Change photographers document May Day Occupy rallies and marches in New York, Washington DC, Chicago, and Oakland as tens of thousands of people took to the streets amidst heavy police presence:


Occupy Wall Street activists staged a May Day Rally calling for a general strike in memory of the history of May 1st as a day dedicated to workers’ rights. Photograph by Andrew Lichtenstein / facingchange.org

Oakland, California

There were many different agendas coalescing together for the May Day protests in Oakland: Immigrants’ rights activists, labor marking the historic holiday, and the Occupy movement seeking to rejuvenate itself.

A large peaceful crowd marched through most of Oakland, but small groups of anarchists engaged in petty vandalism, spraying paint on bank windows and confronting the police, who responded with tear gas. Media attention focused on these incidents, detracting from the real issues.

The longshoremen shut down the port for a day. The nurses are on strike. Those facts were overshadowed by tear gas and street theater.

–Andrew Lichtenstein


About 75 Occupy Chicago protesters held sit-ins outside at two Bank of America branches. Photographs by Carlos Javier Ortiz / facingchange.org

Chicago, Illinois

On a rainy, sweater-wearing day, about a thousand people gathered in Union Park and the two miles to downtown. It was a holiday atmosphere, culminating in a sit-in of activists at Bank Of America branches.

Immigrant rights advocates chanted in Spanish: “Hey Obama! Escucha estamos en la lucha!” (Hey Obama! Listen, we’re in the fight! – “we” meaning the Latino immigrant community and its significant votes.)

Chicago is hosting a NATO summit later this month, and more protests are expected with President Obama and world leaders present.

–Carlos Javier Ortiz


Occupy DC protesters at Malcolm X Park (Officially known as Meridian Hill Park) for a day of music, games, and speeches. Photograph by Lucian Perkins / facingchange.org

Washington D.C.

A small group of several hundred demonstrators met at Malcolm X Park, two and a half miles from the White House, and festively walked through neighborhoods. In the park, there were guitars and games, including “Corporate Pin-the-Donkey” in which a blindfolded protester pins a board with stickers of companies.

It was a low-key day, and the protest reached the White House at 6:30 in the evening. Along the way, curious bystanders took photographs and some shouted their support.

–Lucian Perkins


Between Broome and Spring Streets, Lower Manhattan. Photograph by Alan Chin / facingchange.org

New York, New York

Drizzling rain in the morning threatened to dampen the turnout in New York City, but the sun came out by the early afternoon and 20,000 people marched from Union Square to Wall Street in one of the larger protests nationwide.

Demonstrators gathered at Bryant Park in midtown Manhattan, and staged protests at the Bank of America, Time Warner, Fox, and hedge fund companies. Another group crossed the Williamsburg Bridge from Brooklyn, and were joined by a hundred Black Bloc anarchists. They carried a large “Fuck the Police” banner, and clashed with the NYPD on Houston Street, several were arrested. The police covered one bloodied protester’s head and face with a sweatshirt in an apparent attempt to prevent him being photographed in this condition. Some photographers were harassed by protesters as well as the police, as tensions rose on all sides.

Nonetheless, the predominant feeling, as elsewhere, was celebratory rather than confrontational. The crowd danced in Union Square as musicians performed onstage. Protesters wore costumes and colorful banners. The parade down Broadway was orderly, high-spirited, and stretched for a mile.

The Occupy movement may struggle to define itself in an enduring way after unexpected early success and police repression, but it quietly proved on May Day that peaceful protest can be determined and widespread in the face of violent incidents and short attention-spans.

–Alan Chin and Anthony Suau

 

There have been at least 7,106 documented arrests in 114 U.S. cities as of May 1, 2012 since Sept 17 2011. On May 1st :

Date
Occupy City

No. of Arrests

Description

Source
5/1/2012 Seattle 8 Violence, arrests at Seattle May Day protests Link
Portland 12 Arrests in early Portland May Day protest Link
Oakland 25 25 arrests in Oakland May Day protests Link
Miami 3 Occupy Miami protesters march; three arrested Link
New York 30 In New York, a final May Day march ends at Wall Street Link
Philadelphia 2 2 Arrested in Occupy Protests Link
Los Angeles 13 At least 13 arrested in L.A. May Day protests Link
Albany 23 Arrests mark Occupy’s return Link